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Hand Surgery Fellowship

Hand Surgery Fellowship at UT Southwestern Medical Center

Our Hand Fellowship program is dedicated to training the next generation of hand surgeons. Driven by our dedicated faculty in the Departments of Plastic Surgery and Orthopaedic Surgery, we offer an educational experience that combines extensive clinical exposure with a robust didactic curriculum.

Unmatched Clinical Experience

At the heart of our program is hands-on patient care. Our goal is to train skilled clinicians. To this end, fellows gain exceptional experience treating acute and chronic hand conditions in adult and pediatric populations, working with both the Plastic Surgery and Orthopaedic Surgery faculty. Hand fellows gain clinical exposure at William P. Clements Jr. University Hospital (the teaching hospital for the UT Southwestern Medical Center), Parkland Health (the county hospital serving the underserved population of Dallas county), Children's Health in Dallas and Plano (the leading pediatric health care system in North Texas), the VA North Texas Health Care Dallas Medical Center (serving our veterans); and the Scottish Rite for Children hospital in Dallas (a world-class institution focused on treating congenital differences).

Research, Education, and Leadership 

There are many opportunities to hone your skills as an educator, researcher, and leader. Opportunities to engage in hand surgery research abound, including the ability to participate in biomechanical studies, clinical research, and health outcomes studies. During your time here you will develop leadership and public-speaking skills, and will act as teacher and mentor for many of the residents.

Fellowship Goal

surgeon Dr. Jennifer Kargel performs operation on ganglion cyst
Dr. Jennifer Kargel (right) excises a ganglion cyst.

The goal of the ACGME-accredited UT Southwestern Hand Surgery Fellowship is to prepare individuals for a successful career in hand surgery. The Fellowship Program provides in-depth and comprehensive training in all areas of adult and pediatric hand and wrist surgery. In addition, hand surgery fellows are able to develop and hone leadership, education, and research skills.

Faculty

The Hand Surgery Fellowship is a cooperative effort that includes faculty from the Departments of Plastic Surgery and Orthopaedic Surgery.

Jonathan Cheng, M.D., FACS

Plastic Surgery

Ann Golden, M.D.

Orthopaedic Surgery

Jennifer Kargel, M.D.

Plastic Surgery

Daniel Koehler, M.D.

Orthopaedic Surgery

Shelby Lies, M.D.

Plastic Surgery

Scott Oishi, M.D.

Plastic Surgery

Richard Samade, M.D., Ph.D.

Orthopaedic Surgery

Douglas Sammer, M.D.

Plastic Surgery, Fellowship Program Director

Christopher Stutz, M.D.

Orthopaedic Surgery

Andrew Zhang, M.D.

Plastic Surgery

Institutions

Hand surgery fellows rotate through multiple institutions, including UT Southwestern University Hospitals, Parkland Health, Children’s Health℠, the Dallas Veterans Affairs Medical Center, and Scottish Rite for Children. Each institution has unique characteristics and patient populations that expose the hand surgery fellows to a wide range of hand and wrist problems.

Education

There are two hand-focused didactic sessions each week:

Hand Indications Conference

On Tuesdays at Hand Indications Conference, we hold a case-based discussion of interesting cases that are scheduled for the upcoming week.

  • Tuesday, 6 a.m. – 7a.m.
  • Case-based

Hand Conference

The formal Hand Conference is held on Thursdays, and is a traditional teaching conference. The curriculum begins with straight-forward topics and addresses increasingly complex issues over the course of the year. While there are learners of all levels present in Hand Conference, these sessions are focused on fellow-level education. Most lecture topics are presented by experienced hand surgery faculty, with a few sessions over the course of the year being presented by the hand fellows. In addition, intermixed with the clinical topics are three to four sessions dedicated to "the business of hand surgery," presented by various community surgeons. Quarterly M&M and journal review are also incorporated into the Hand Conference curriculum.

  • Thursday, 6 a.m. – 7a.m.
  • Didactics, journal review, M&M, business of hand surgery

Clinical Exposure

surgeon Dr. Douglas Sammer performs operation on hand
Dr. Douglas Sammer (left) performs endoscopic CTR.

The diversity of institutions allows hand surgery fellows to be exposed to an array of complex hand and wrist problems over the course of the Hand Surgery Fellowship Program, including:

  • Reconstruction of the hand, wrist, and forearm
  • Degenerative and autoimmune diseases
  • Acute and non-acute trauma, including hand, wrist, brachial plexus, and replantation
  • Arthroscopy of the hand and wrist
  • Congenital hand and upper extremity, pediatric brachial plexus, and cerebral palsy
  • Arthroplasty in the hand and wrist
  • Fellows who have an interest in shoulder and elbow surgery are able to receive some exposure in those areas, although the true focus of the fellowship is hand and wrist surgery.

Case Volume

The Hand Fellows each perform approximately 750 cases per year. The weekly case load per fellow is about 12 to 20 cases. In the table below, we have selected a few case types and the corresponding single-fellow volume from a recent academic year to give a representative idea of the clinical exposure.

Fellow 1Case CountProgram AverageNational AverageFellow Percentile
Total 684 731 665 70th
Scaphoid 12 9.0 7.6 83rd
Wrist fracture / dislocation 86 84.5 49.2 91st
Vascular 17 26.0 23.8 50th
Arthroscopy 8 10.5 14.5 50th
Nerve Decompress 114 116.0 124.2 47th

Rotation Schedule

The Hand Fellows alternate between two main rotations, the Parkland Memorial Hospital (PMH) rotation, and the UT Southwestern/Children's/VA (UT/CMC/VA) rotation. These rotations last three months each, allowing the fellow to become fully integrated into the hand surgery team at each location. On each rotation, the fellow will spend approximately equal time working with orthopaedic and plastic hand surgery faculty. Each fellow rotates onto these two services twice over the course of the year. In addition, near the end of the academic year, each fellow will spend six weeks at Texas Scottish Rite hospital in Dallas on a dedicated congenital hand surgery rotation.

Fellow 1PMHUT/CMC/VAPMHUT/CMC/VA
Fellow 2 UT/CMC/VA Cava UT/CMC/TSRH/VA PMH

Call Schedule

The Hand Fellows typically take calls one week at a time, alternating weeks between the two fellows. There is always a team of senior and junior residents on call in front of the hand fellow. The Hand Fellow is only called for cases that go to the operating room. Past fellows have found this arrangement to be highly educational and minimally burdensome.

Hand Fellowship Alumni

YearNameCurrent Location
2024 Luke Grome, M.D. Baylor University Medical Center, Dallas TX
2024 Mark Spencer, M.D. Maine General Orthopaedics, ME
2023 Brian Jao, M.D. Kansas City, Missouri
2023 Michaelia Sunderland, M.D. San Antonio, Texas
2022 Hayden Rockson, M.D. Leominster, Massachusetts
2022 Kyle Edwards, M.D. Spokane, Washington
2021 James Heaberlin, MD Milwaukee, Wisconsin
2021 Michael Del Core, M.D. Omaha, Nebraska
2020 Thomas Lucak, M.D. Pascagoula, Mississippi
2020 Hannah Kim, M.D. Fort Worth, Texas
2019 Seth Tebockhorst, M.D. Golden, Colorado
2019 Amy Kite, M.D. Providence, RI
2018 William Pientka, M.D. Fort Worth, Texas
2018 Aparajit Naram, M.D. Springfield, Massachusetts
2017 Kathlyn Drexler, M.D. Sioux Falls, South Dakota
2017 Shelby Lies, M.D. Dallas, Texas
2016 Lily Daniali, M.D. Denver, Colorado
2016 Zachary Hurwitz, M.D. Worcester, Massachusetts
2015 Ashley Ignatiuk, M.D. Aurora, Colorado
2015 Brian Mailey, M.D. Springfield, Illinois
2014 Jennifer Kargel, M.D. Dallas, Texas
2014 Gangadasu Reddy, M.D. Dallas, Texas
2013 Rey Ramirez, M.D. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
2013 Tarik Husain, M.D. Miami Beach, Florida
2012 Steven Clark, M.D. Dallas, Texas
2012 Toni Lin, M.D. Indianapolis, Indiana
2011 Loai Alsalmi, M.D. Riyadh, Saudi Arabia - King Fahad Medical City
2011 Tamir Pritsch, M.D. Dallas, Texas
2010 Healthy Desai, M.D. Long Beach, California
2010 Timothy Schaub, M.D. Phoenix, Arizona
2009 Michael Dolan, M.D. Selmer, Tennessee
2007 Charles Clasen, M.D. Metairie, Louisiana
2006 Bishr Hijazi, M.D. Las Vegas, Nevada
2005 Ashkan Ghavami, M.D. Dallas, Texas
2004 Blake Morrison, M.D. Dallas, Texas
2003 John Griffin, M.D. Oakland, California
2002 Matthew Conrad, M.D. Wichita, Kansas
2001 Arshad R. Muzaffar, M.D. Columbia, Missouri
2000 David E. Morales, M.D. Dallas, Texas
1999 Francisco J. Rafols, M.D. Homestead, Florida
1997 Larry H. Hollier, Jr., M.D. Houston, Texas
1995 Scott Oishi, M.D. Garland, Texas
1994 John Lindsey, M.D. Metairie, Louisiana
1993 Greg Dowbak, M.D. Naples, Florida
1992 Robert Wilcox, M.D. Plano, Texas
1991 Denton Watumull, M.D. Garland, Texas