Kante had a tumor on the parathyroid gland, but because she was singing during the "critical moments" the surgeon could be sure the operation "was going well". Professor Dhonneur said it was the first time a tumor has been removed using the technique, as the procedure would usually be carried out under general anesthetic. "The pain of such an operation is intolerable if you are fully awake.
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Saturday, June 21, 2014
Hypnotized professional singer sang during throat surgery to save her voice
Professional singer, Alama Kante, has sung through surgery to remove a tumor from her throat, so surgeons could avoid damaging her vocal
cords.
The Guinean singer, who is based in France, was given just a local anesthetic and hypnotized to help with the pain during the operation in
Paris.
Kante was nervous about losing her voice, but in a "world first" her
surgeon suggested she sing throughout.
He said one slip of his scalpel could have destroyed her singing voice.
Professor Giles Dhonneur, who is head of the anesthesia and intensive
care department at Henri Mondor hospital, performed the operation in
April with Kante singing as he worked.
Kante had a tumor on the parathyroid gland, but because she was singing during the "critical moments" the surgeon could be sure the operation "was going well". Professor Dhonneur said it was the first time a tumor has been removed using the technique, as the procedure would usually be carried out under general anesthetic. "The pain of such an operation is intolerable if you are fully awake.
"Only hypnosis enables you to stand it," he said. "She went into a
trance listening to the words of the hypnotist. She went a long way
away, to Africa. And she began to sing - it was amazing," he said.
Kante, who has made a full recovery, revealed she had been asked before
the operation if she wanted to "travel".
"I let myself be guided. It's as though I was not in the operating theater at all, I was far away in Senegal," she said.
Dhonneur said Kante had fallen silent at the end of the procedure, when
"everyone held their breath" before she spoke, much to the relief of the
room.
Kante had a tumor on the parathyroid gland, but because she was singing during the "critical moments" the surgeon could be sure the operation "was going well". Professor Dhonneur said it was the first time a tumor has been removed using the technique, as the procedure would usually be carried out under general anesthetic. "The pain of such an operation is intolerable if you are fully awake.
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