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Written by a patient at St George's Hospital
29th March 2018


I am a 57 year old woman with Parkinson's disease who recently had DBS surgery with the DBS neurosurgical team led by Mr Erlick Pereira at St George's hospital, in Tooting, London. As DBS surgery is currently unavailable in Ireland, Irish people like myself must travel abroad to avail of this treatment. As a private patient I could have chosen any of a number of different places to have this elective surgery. I have an excellent neurologist, Professor Mark Edwards, who is professionally acquainted with this team and I was guided in the first instance by his personal connection. But apart from professional reputation and word of mouth recommendation, how do you identify a surgeon in whom you can have confidence? The standard advice is to enquire about the number of DBS surgeries the neurosurgeon has performed and what the infection rate is in his surgical unit. All well and good, but numbers are only meaningful when you know exactly how they have been derived and whether you are comparing like with like. My own preference in deciding to commit to DBS with Mr Pereira, came down to one question in the end - do I trust this person, not just with my life but more importantly, with my quality of life. My first contact with Mr Pereira was when he phoned me himself to inform me he could do bilateral DBS, with minimal head shaving, and the fitting of the stereotactic frame and implanting of the IPG in my chest wall in one four hour surgery, all under general anaesthetic. My first thought was, well we're off to a good start here. The surgeon is actually speaking directly to the person who will have to live with the consequences of his work, and before I've even left my home country. From here on, he addressed every one of my questions immediately, having created an environment where I wasn't afraid to ask them. If he didn't have a ready answer, he said so. If I questioned how or why something was or wasn’t done, he acknowledged it and apologised if necessary. His students as well as his peers clearly like and respect him. He is incredibly proficient at keeping up with the administrative side of things. What used to be called 'paperwork’ is taken care of by him personally by email as you go along and the patient is kept in the loop. As an overseas patient I particularly appreciated this. Aided by his assistant, Dr Shtaya, he installed the most up todate DBS system, Boston Scientific Vercise - my preference - subject to medical suitability. The pain management was excellent. After I awoke after surgery in the High Dependency Unit, it wasn't until I looked down and noticed a white bandage on my chest, that I realised it was all over and I was not just alive but comfortable in my body. I'm sure a large part of this comfort was due to the work of the anaesthetist, Mr Elawushi, who came to my bedside to meet me prior to theatre. I found his calm demeanour very inspiring of my confidence. Anaesthetists are a bit like air traffic controllers. They work largely behind the scenes but carry a greater proportion of responsibility than that for which they are generally credited. The nursing care at St George's was excellent too. I will never forget the kindness of the nursing staff to me, at one of the most vulnerable moments of my life. Overall, I haven't encountered this standard of care in a hospital since my daughter spent five days in an American ICU many years ago, at much greater expense. In the beginning I entered into this whole process absolutely petrified. Yet by the time I walked into theatre I felt completely relaxed and calm. I felt safe. I had made a decision I could live with whatever the outcome, because I was confident that everyone around me was going to do their best for me and you can't ask for more than that really. I'm home now, 16 days post surgery at the time of writing, with no dyskinesia, able to stride down the street. What a transformative experience after a year of being housebound. Lastly, I need to mention the neurologist on the team who did my pre-surgical assessment and who does follow up programming of the DBS device, Dr Dominic Paviour. Assuming good patient selection and a positive surgical outcome, your DBS experience is still only as good in the long run, as the quality of its programming. This is a collaborative process between the programmer and the patient and I am prepared to travel back to the uk on an ongoing basis to achieve optimal programming of the device with Dr Paviour, who is patient, knowledgeable and responsive to my questions. It has been a positive experience from start to finish.

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Written by a patient at St George's Hospital
5th February 2018


I was admitted to St Georges Hospital to have a thoracic spine meningioma removed. Due to the fact I had Severe/Critical Aortic Stenosis it was decided that the operation would not be possible under general anesthetic, therefore Mr Pereira suggested he could perform this under local anesthetic. As this was the first time this operation would have been performed this way. Mr Pereira was extremely helpful and caring in his advice to me. This operation was a success and I can't thank Mr Pereira enough. I am pleased to say I am totally pain free, and I can recommend Mr Pereira to anyone that requires surgery. I was very happy with all the treatment I received from the staff at St Georges Hospital.

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Written by a carer at St George's Hospital
12th January 2018


Excellent surgery on shunt procedure. Relocation of shunt by Mr Pereira proved successful and the procedure showed an increase of recovery time compared to previous shunt 20 months previous. Thank you Mr Pereira.

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Written by a patient at St George's Hospital
17th December 2017


Having suffered a large bleed on the brain early in the morning of Sunday 8th October 2017, I was transferred under blue lights from the Royal Surrey to the high dependency unit of the neurosurgery ward Atkinson Morley of St George's Hospital Tooting where I had an eight night stay. All in all I had an excellent experience of Erlick and the full team : they are good people. They resisted the temptation to crack me open to have a look until they had found the cause via CT scans and angiogram.In the end , I was found to have an Idiopathic Subarachnoid Haemorrhage and thankfully no surgery was necessary. They were very good at keeping me informed of what was going on at each stage of the process. As promised , two months on I am now essentially fully recovered. One small suggestion : the nurses have a scale of 1 to 10 as to pain level whilst consultants use 1 to 4 . Perhaps there is a need to be a consistency especially as I never give anybody the highest or lowest mark ! Deciding between 2 and 3 was tricky. Eight days after having been blue lighted in , I was able to walk out under my own steam but some 10kilos lighter ! Thank you again : it could have been so much worse.

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Written by a patient at St George's Hospital
7th December 2017


Quick, helpful, informative, polite, professional and reassuring. I had sciatica and needed a microdiscectomy. The operation was went very smoothly, and I was back to normal by two months, earlier than predicted. Delighted with the results with Mr Pereira.

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Page 17 of 25

Specialises in

  • Neurosurgery
  • Orthopaedic and Trauma Surgery
  • Pain medicine

Profile

Mr. Pereira is a London Consultant Neurosurgeon who sees patients at St George's University Hospital, London Spine Clinic and The London Clinic. He has a broad practice of brain, spine and peripheral nerve surgery. He is dual-trained in complex spinal surgery, having trained in neurosurgery at the Oxford John Radcliffe followed by an orthopaedic complex spinal surgery fellowship in Guy’s and St Thomas’. He has special interests in all surgeries for severe chronic pain and cancer pain, spinal cord and dorsal root ganglion stimulation for pain, complex spinal surgery from slipped discs to trauma, tumour and minimally invasive surgery and general brain surgery including trauma, benign lesions, vascular problems and hydrocephalus. He is the lead clinician for functional neurosurgery at St George’s and performed its first deep brain stimulation for Parkinson’s disease and other movement disorders, pain and epilepsy operations.

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