A Salisbury VA surgeon recently performed the first ever “awake” carpal tunnel surgery at the Charlotte VA Health Care Center. Veterans now will be able to avoid operating room procedures, such as anesthesia, and coordinating a ride home. Instead, they’re in and out in under 30 minutes.

“It’s been a tremendous help for our patients,” said Dr. Jeffrey Baker, Salisbury VA section chief of Orthopedic Surgery. “Once you give the patient the option to do the procedure wide awake, they are quick to choose it. They’ve been coming up here to Salisbury VA to get it done but opening this up in Charlotte will allow us to treat the patients who don’t want to drive to Salisbury.”

Dr. Jeffrey Baker, Salisbury VA chief of Orthopedic Surgery

“Revolutionary thing we’re doing.”

Baker, who will operate out of Charlotte one day per month, performed five cases on his opening day in Charlotte. Seven were scheduled with two no shows. He anticipates doing ten each morning going forward.

With more than a third of surgical referrals coming from the Charlotte area, demand for these procedures should remain consistent.

“Since we began doing these, I would guess we’ve done more than any VA in the country,” Baker said. “It really is a revolutionary thing that we’re doing.”

Baker has simplified things and made it a “band aid surgery,” and at 10-15 minutes per procedure, he can help a high number of Veterans.

“It’s a very quick procedure,” he added. “That’s because we’ve stripped away all the operating room procedures. It takes time and additional staff to accommodate OR patients. I can do three or four of these procedures in the time it would take to do one such surgery in the OR.”

Procedure takes less than 10 minutes

The surgeries help Veterans with issues such as carpal tunnel, trigger finger and ganglion cysts. A local anesthetic injection is given and a small incision is then made over the affected area. The surgeon then goes in to either fix the problem or remove the cysts. In many cases, the procedure takes less than 10 minutes.

Gone are the days of splinting and bracing of the repaired hand. Patients leave with a band aid and get things moving quickly. They tend to progress very well – a far cry from just several years ago.

“A friend had a carpal tunnel surgery done five years ago and you would have thought she’d had a total knee replacement,” said Salisbury VA chief of staff Dr. Randall Gehle. “It was so uncomfortable for her that she canceled the opposite hand which was just as symptomatic because she didn’t want to go through that again.”

Thankfully, hand surgeries have come a long way. And bringing them to Charlotte is another way that Salisbury VA is improving patient access.

“We’re going to do whatever we can to improve access to care, whether that’s streamlining a procedure or bringing the care to another facility like we’re doing in Charlotte,” said Salisbury VA director Joseph Vaughn.

Topics in this story

Leave a comment

The comments section is for opinions and feedback on this particular article; this is not a customer support channel. If you are looking for assistance, please visit Ask VA or call 1-800-698-2411. Please, never put personally identifiable information (SSAN, address, phone number, etc.) or protected health information into the form — it will be deleted for your protection.

12 Comments

  1. Victor Sellers October 29, 2021 at 11:41

    This is not new. It may be NEW TO THE VA, but my sister n law had this done a couple years ago awake, but this is NOT a NEW PROCEDURE. I think it has been used for 20 years or MORE. I had malaria in Vietnam and they diagnosed me with an allergy to Chloroquine and Atopic Dermatitis. The bone pain and serious abdominal pain with bloody urine, erratic heart rates, -60 to +90 bpm at bed rest, was ignored. I don’t they knew what malaria was, or what to look for. It caused permanent mental and physical damage, beyond repair. GOD help our Service People!

  2. Sue Houser October 28, 2021 at 19:09

    I had carpal tunnel surgery at one of the Littlr Rock VA hospitals maybe 15 – 20 years ago wide awake. It was done in an OR, circulation in my arm was stopped with tourniquet and possibly local anesthesia was used.

  3. William Richards October 28, 2021 at 11:27

    When will this service come to the VA clinic in Columbus Ohio

  4. William Richards October 28, 2021 at 11:25

    When will the service come to the Columbus BI clinic

  5. Dan Bragdon October 28, 2021 at 10:58

    Will they do this type surgery in Texas VA

  6. Jeff Brady October 27, 2021 at 19:42

    Well, hemp me then. The Memphis VA will not do my hand…..

  7. Marilyn Daigle October 26, 2021 at 23:26

    Ahhh, oh my. I had that surgery in my doctor’s office more than 20 years ago with only novacaine. I was completely awake. Seems like the VA is 20 plus years behind.

  8. Melvin Jefferson October 26, 2021 at 21:10

    Well he’s the best he did my trigger finger surgery on my thumb a few years a ago and it took no time in and out

    • John Whale November 3, 2021 at 10:27

      Just as long as the surgeon is as competent as Dr. Baker obviously is.

  9. Angela Darling October 26, 2021 at 20:16

    What about Boston area VAs?

  10. Fred Schimmel October 26, 2021 at 15:48

    When will this procedure come to the Long Beach VA?

  11. Joseph M Dolan October 26, 2021 at 12:59

    This is a great improvement. I have been putting my second surgery off because of the issues outlined in the article. Are Philadelphia or Wilmington doing these surgeries?

Comments are closed.

More Stories