Newburgh firefighter uses saw for delicate operation By Doyle
Murphy<javascript:NewWindow(500,550,'/apps/pbcs.dll/personalia?ID=120',0)>
Times Herald-Record
October 26, 2008 6:00 AM

CITY OF NEWBURGH — A Newburgh firefighter became an ad hoc surgeon Friday,
called upon to use a pneumatic saw to cut a piece of steel pipe off a
73-year-old man's penis.

Firefighters were dispatched to the Newburgh campus of St. Luke's Cornwall
Hospital shortly after 9 p.m. for a public service call, Assistant Chief
Scott Mandoske said. Hospital personnel asked them for tools to cut off a
ring. The fire department has a ring cutter used to clip wedding bands from
swollen fingers, but firefighters learned that wouldn't be enough. The pipe
was an inch long, an inch in diameter and made of quarter-inch-thick steel.

Authorities said the pipe was apparently an erotic aid, but did not
elaborate.

Medical personnel weren't able to perform typical medical procedures, such
as forcing blood from one side of the penis to the other in order to pull
the pipe off. The man's penis had swollen and turned purple.

Mandoske said firefighters chose a "wizzer saw" for the job. The wizzer saw
is an automotive tool, powered with air bottles and adopted by emergency
responders who frequently deal with car crashes. Firefighters use it more
commonly to saw off mufflers.

This was to be a more delicate operation.

Hospital staff prepared the man, who was unidentified, by wrapping the skin
and sliding a lubricated tongue depressor between the pipe and the man's
penis to protect him. A doctor, nurses and a paramedic gathered in the
Emergency Room as a firefighter — "one of the new guys" — prepared to begin
the operation.

"Just don't cut it off," the senior citizen reportedly said.

For more than 90 minutes, the firefighter sawed bit by bit into the pipe,
pausing occasionally to cool the saw. The time duration was critical,
Mandoske said. Hospital staff worried the man could lose his penis if blood
circulation was cut off too long.

The wizzer saw emptied the first bottle of air and then a second. Finally,
after five air bottles, the saw clipped through the final bit of pipe, and
they were able to free the man. He was apparently unharmed by the operation,
Mandoske said, although the assistant chief didn't press for details.

[EMAIL PROTECTED]


-- 
Jon

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