Mayo Clinic Department of General Surgery
Michael Sarr MD unnecessarily doing neurectomies x15 years for abdominal nerve entrapments - 2% lidocaine injections are the treatment - without consultation with John Bundrick MD - without patient consent - using p

Health & Medicine

Dr. Michael Sarr (Chief General Surgery Mayo Clinic) has been unnecessarily doing abdominal wall surgeries for 'neurectomies' for the last 15 years at Mayo Clinic - painful abdominal nerve removal surgeries where he cuts the nerve out - for a benign condition of abdominal nerve entrapment syndrome (=ACNES). Dr. John B. Bundrick hasn't said a word, and he's on YOUTUBE.

These NEURECTOMIES are also very deforming, uncosmetic, and unaesthetic procedures. Abdominal nerve entrapment happens commonly in old incisions or after vigorous sports exertions. One resident at Cleveland Clinic showed up in the ER with it, after he exercised too vigorously on his newly bought abdominal exercise machine. And he was almost operated on.

Dr. Michael Sarr, however, does these procedures without patient consent, or teamwork medical consultation - quickie clearance.


Company: Mayo Clinic Department of General Surgery
Country: USA
State: Minnesota
City: Rochester
Address: 200 First Street SW
Phone: 5072842511
Site: mayoclinic.org
  <     >  

RELATED COMPLAINTS

Mayo Clinic General Internal Medicine
John B. Bundrick MD sitting on cases of abdominal nerve entrapments, with Dr. Sarr is doing unnecessary surgeries for the last 15 years - no Carnett's test, common mass closures for 'practice' where Sarr cuts all 3 abdom

John B. BundrickMD
Mayo Clinic Rochester publishing editor/contributor to Mayo Clin Proc with 'clinical pearls' about Carnett's maneuver to diagnose non-operative chronic abdominal wall pain

Mayo Clinic General Surgery
John Bundrick MD allow unindicated unconsented for neurectomies because they can't diagnose abdominal nerve entrapments - after surgery or sports overuse - and then there isn't one surgeon who can repair the muscles c

Mayo Clinic Department of Surgery
Allows that surgeons unnecessarily operate on the most common of abdominal wall pain calling it 'neuroma' = anterior cutaneous nerve entrapment = treatment needed is only injection of 2% lidocaine = p

John B. Bundrick MD
Mayo Clinic Rochester no patient is going to trust you in an evaluation, to do a Carnett's test for abdominal cutaneous nerve entrapment syndrome, and not unnecessary surgery, until Dr. Michael Sarr stops neurectomized

Board of Trustees Mayo Clinic
Michael Sarr MD, John Bundrick MD allowing Dr. Sarr to do neurectomies while Dr. Bundrick publishes the non-operative treatments, no options, quickie clearances - publishing one thing and doing another - neurectomies damage muscules

Mayo Clinic Rochester
John Bundrick MD publish that Mayo Clinic handles the common problem of abdominal cutaneous nerve entrapment syndrome (ACNES) with 2% lidocaine but patients are really being taken to surgery for painful obsolete neure

Mayo Clinic Rochester
John Bundrick MD need to check your St. Mary's OR today for how many 'neuroma' surgeries have been scheduled without a Carnett's test - to practice common mass closure deformities - it's very reassurring to be assault

Mayo Clinic Board of Trustees
Mayo Clinic General Surgery allowing abdominal neurectomies without workup or consent while the Mayo Clinic Proceedings publishes how to diagnose & treat with a 2% lidocaine injection, the pseudoneuroma Mayo scam which patients

Michael Sarr MD
Mayo Clinic Department of General Surgery Rochester will cut anything 'normal' out, doing procedures without consent, getting patients to sign up for 5 minute procedures and then cutting normal nerves & muscles for common mass closure practice