HOUSTON, MARCH 28, 2004
          SEEMA HAKHU KACHRU 
          NRI, Dr Ramesh Srungaram, 52, weight loss surgeon who has been sued 
          22 times for alleged medical malpractice, has shut his practice. He 
          worked at several hospitals in recent years, in spite of the lawsuits 
          and complaints against him, quit from the Houston Community Hospital 
          on March 19. According to the report, two years ago at Highland Medical 
          Center in Lubbock, Texas, four patients were rushed to University Medical 
          Center in critical condition over two days, after Srungaram performed 
          gastric bypass surgery. One of the four died and Srungaram resigned. 
          However, Dr Srungaram was accepted a month later by Houston Community 
          Hospital where one of his patients, Chris Berwick, died several months 
          after undergoing laparoscopic bypass surgery, the Houston Chronicle 
          said. It was there that another patient Donna Collins died last year 
          11 days after Srungaram performed bypass surgery on her. Collins 
          family brought a medical malpractice suit against Srungaram  one 
          of 22 filed against him  only to discover that neither the doctor, 
          nor the hospital had insurance at the time.
          (PTI) 
        
        
        Weight-loss surgeon closely monitored, 
          concern over track record
          
          
        
        AUSTIN, December 13, 2003
          Houston Chronicle 
        A Sugar Land weight-loss surgeon, whose Houston and Lubbock 
          patients suffered kidney failure, bloodstream infections and even death, 
          is being closely monitored by the state agency that regulates physicians, 
          officials said Friday. 
        Dr. Ramesh K. Srungaram, who performed surgeries at Cypress 
          Fairbanks Hospital in Houston and at Highland Medical Center in Lubbock 
          until 2002, was put on probation for seven and a half years, fined $25,000 
          and ordered to operate only in the presence of another surgeon approved 
          by the Texas State Board of Medical Examiners, state regulators said 
          Friday. 
        Its not inconceivable that theres more 
          (disciplinary actions) to come in this case, said Dr. Donald Patrick, 
          executive director of the state medical board. A spokeswoman at Srungarams 
          office, Obesity Surgery Specialists at 11811 FM 1960 West, said the 
          doctor had no comment about the boards ruling. 
        Srungaram, 52, operates at Houston Community Hospital, 
          2807 Little York Road. In the past, he has flown between Houston and 
          Lubbock performing procedures, Patrick said. 
        Bariatric, or weight-loss, surgery is a really, 
          really popular sub-specialty now, Patrick said, but that procedures 
          often are complicated by the fact that many of the patients are medically 
          fragile due to obesity-related problems such as diabetes and high 
          blood pressure. 
        Experts estimate the mortality rate from the surgery itself 
          is one in 200. Potential problems may include intestinal leaks, serious 
          bleeding, infections, blood clots in the lungs and abdominal abscesses. 
        
        Even so, Srungarams track record raised concerns 
          among hospital and state officials. 
        Following an alarming spate of bad outcomes among Srungarams 
          weight-loss surgery patients, Cypress Fairbanks suspended the doctors 
          privileges in June 2002, according to medical board documents. The hospital 
          later restored his privileges with the understanding the doctor would 
          work under supervision, but Srungaram resigned. Similarly, Srungaram 
          resigned from the Lubbock hospital after his privileges were suspended 
          in August 2002 pending further investigation. 
        The state medical board said, during a seven-day period 
          in July 2002, four of Srungarams Lubbock patients developed serious 
          complications after weight-loss surgery and one patient died. 
        The fatality was a 49-year-old woman with diabetes, high 
          blood pressure and arthritis, who learned about Srungarams services 
          through an Internet site, the board said. After gastric bypass surgery, 
          she developed a leak from her small intestine, breathing problems and 
          kidney failure and was transferred in critical condition to Texas Tech 
          University Medical Center where she later died. 
        Another Lubbock patient, a 450-pound woman, developed 
          a leak and required additional surgeries and had to be transferred to 
          Texas Tech University Medical Center. 
        Based on the opinion of the Boards consultant, 
          (Srungarams) care for these four patients was below the acceptable 
          standard, the board said. 
        During 2001 and 2002, Srungaram performed 123 gastric 
          bypass procedures at the Cypress Fairbanks facility and 11 of those 
          patients experienced complications as a result of the procedure, the 
          state medical board said. 
        Several of the patients required additional surgeries 
          to correct problems and had lengthy hospital stays. One 38-year-old 
          woman wound up in an emergency room with septic shock following her 
          surgery. She had to be put on mechanical ventilation and was eventually 
          placed in a long-term acute care facility. 
        Srungarams recruited many of his patients via an 
          Internet site or at seminars on bariatric, or weight-loss, surgery. 
          A free, informational weight-loss surgery Web site, www.obesehelp.net, 
          connects Srungaram and other doctors to prospective patients, said Scott 
          Douglass, the Web sites owner. The state medical boards 
          disciplinary order bans the doctor from accepting any patients through 
          the Internet. 
        Srungarams surgical supervisor, or proctor, will 
          participate in the next 100 bariatric surgeries performed by Srungaram, 
          according to the boards order. That doctor also will prepare written 
          reports documenting any deficiencies or recommendations to improve Srungarams 
          practice. 
        Srungaram was honored in 1987 by the Denton A. Cooley 
          Cardiovascular Surgical Society as an outstanding trainee at the Texas 
          Heart Institute at St. Lukes Episcopal Hospital.