Dr. Michael A. Kellams DO, Anesthesiologist
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Dr. Michael A. Kellams DO

Anesthesiologist

2001 W 86th St Indianapolis IN, 46260

About

Michael A. Kellams, DO, is an anesthesiologist at Northside Anesthesia Services and is affiliated with St. Vincent's Hospital. With over 20 years of experience, he specializes in anesthesia for trauma & spine surgery, regional anesthesia, and outpatient surgery. Educated at Indiana University and Michigan State University, Dr. Kellams completed a residency at Indiana University in 1996. Additionally, he is board certified by The American Board of Anesthesiology, the Indiana State Medical Association, the Indiana Society of Anesthesiologists, the American Medical Association and the American Society of Anesthesiologists.

Education and Training

Indiana University B.S. 1988

Mi State Univ, Coll of Osteo Med, East Lansing Mi 1992

Board Certification

AnesthesiologyAmerican Board of AnesthesiologyABA

Provider Details

MaleEnglish 32 years of experience
Dr. Michael A. Kellams DO
Dr. Michael A. Kellams DO's Expert Contributions
  • What should you not do before general anesthesia?

    Thats a vague question, but without knowing what type of surgery you are having a few "don'ts" regarding general anesthesia are: -Don't eat any sooner than 4 hours before general anesthesia (sometimes longer depending on the type of surgery and other medical problems you have -Don't drink alcohol or do recreational drugs less than 24 hours before general anesthesia. Also, very importantly, let your anesthesiologist know what type of recreational drugs and how frequently you use them. -Don't smoke less than 24 hours before general anesthesia. And actually, the longer you can abstain before surgery the better your surgical healing. -There are also several prescription and over-the-counter medications to avoid before general anesthesia. You should consult your surgeon or an anesthesiologist before having surgery to know what these are. READ MORE

  • Can local anesthesia be used for hernia surgery?

    Depending on the type of hernia you have, and the size of the hernia, sometimes you can have local anesthesia for repair. Something to keep in mind, however, is that once you commit to local anesthesia you can't change your mind after the surgeon begins as an anesthesiologist will not be present. It may be more preferable to have at least Monitored Anesthesia Sedation with local anesthesia so that an anesthesiologist can be present and can adjust the sedation level to safely get you through the procedure and help the surgeon be able to accomplish a complete repair. READ MORE

  • Which anesthesia is better for C section?

    For planned C Sections, the safest and preferable anesthetic is a spinal anesthetic. READ MORE

  • What kind of anesthesia is used for a breast biopsy?

    For breast biopsies, we typically use local anesthesia plus monitored anesthesia sedation. READ MORE

  • How does dental anesthesia work?

    I'm assuming you are referring to the local anesthetic the dentist injects to numb to area. Local anesthetics work by blocking sodium channels on the nerve to "turn off" the nerve so that pain messages don't reach the brain from that nerve. This is why the area has no feeling temporarily. Typically the numbness can last anywhere from an hour up to 4 hours. READ MORE

  • Will my son feel nauseous after anesthesia?

    Nausea can be common after tonsillectomy. The anesthesiologist will administer medications during surgery to help prevent nausea. In addition, the surgeon will prescribe an antiemetic to take postoperatively. It is important to prevent vomiting after a tonsillectomy to prevent bleeding. READ MORE

  • Are you asleep for an epidural steroid injection?

    No. Epidural Steroid injections are typically done in the office with local anesthesia. The doctor will numb up the area before placing the epidural needle. READ MORE

  • Can anesthesia change your personality?

    There haven't been any case reports in the modern age where anesthesia changed someone's personality. While under the influence of various anesthetic drugs, however, you temporarily may act differently. For example, you may be either drowsy or disinhibited, much like when under the influence of alcohol. READ MORE

  • Which local anesthetic is the most cardiotoxic?

    Bupivacaine is well known for its cardiotoxicity if inadvertently injected intravascularly. READ MORE

  • Does anesthesia cause respiratory depression?

    By virtue of their desired clinical effect, almost all anesthetics and sedatives cause respiratory depression. An exception is local anesthetics. This is why anesthesiologists are the ones who administer these medications. The degree of respiratory depression is dose-dependant and varies among different medications and medication types. READ MORE

  • What medication is used in a nerve block?

    Nerve blocks are performed with local anesthetics. When a local anesthetic is injected near a nerve, the local anesthetic is absorbed through the nerve membrane. The resultant interruption of Sodium channel activity by the local anesthetic causes the nerve to temporarily cease to function. If the nerve is a sensory nerve, the result is numbness in the area of the body that nerve is travelling from. If the nerve is a motor nerve, the nerve cannot conduct an impulse with resultant motor activity. If the nerve has both motor and sensory functions, there will be numbness and motor inactivity in the area of the body that nerve is travelling to and from. READ MORE

  • How long does ulnar nerve block last?

    The duration of a nerve block is dependent on which local anesthetic is used and if any adjuncts to prolong the block were used. If a short acting local anesthetic like lidocaine is used, the nerve block may only last an hour or 2. If a long acting local anesthetic like bupivacaine is used the nerve block may last 4-6 hours. If epinephrine is added to the local anesthetic it will roughly double the duration. If a medication such as dexmedetomidine or clonidine is used, the duration could be 4-8x longer. READ MORE

  • How long do you have to lay flat after spinal anesthesia?

    You do not need to lay flat after a spinal anesthetic. Spinal anesthetics differ from a "Spinal tap" for diagnostic purposes. Spinal taps for diagnosis use a fairly large needle and involve removing spinal fluid for testing. Patients are advised to lay flat after that for a few hours to give their body time to manufacture more cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) to replace what was removed. The purpose for laying flat is to avoid a severe headache from the loss of CSF. In a spinal anesthetic, a very small specially designed needle is used and no CSF is lost. Rather a small amount of local anesthetic is placed into the CSF. The risk of headache is very small, so patients do not need to lay flat. READ MORE

  • How do you get rid of anesthesia numbness fast?

    Unfortunately, there’s no way to “get rid of numbness fast.” The local anesthetic that causes the numbness has to be metabolized by the enzymes in your body’s tissue. Different local anesthetics are metabolized at different rates and in some instances by different enzymes, depending on whether the local anesthetic is an amide or ester based chemical. Also, the rate at which a local anesthetic is metabolized is dependent on where in the body it was placed because of different blood supply. In highly vascular areas like the mouth, local anesthetics tend to be metabolized faster. In poorly vascular areas like fat tissue, Local anesthetics take much longer to be metabolized. Finally, sometimes other medications are mixed with local anesthetics to make them last longer. READ MORE

  • Are anesthesiologists taking care of covid-19 patients?

    Yes, anesthesiologists are taking care of COVID-19 patients, in several different ways. Some patients with active COVID-19 have a need for surgery that can’t wait until they have recovered from their disease. Also, some women in labor had active COVID and needed anesthesia for delivery of their baby. Finally, some anesthesiologists manage patients who are on the ventilator in the ICU. In my hospital, we have intensive care specialists that do that, but when we were at our peak in April here in Indiana, they became quickly overwhelmed and asked for assistance from the anesthesiologists. Some of us spent those peak weeks helping our intensive care colleagues out by staffing the ICU and performing procedures on those patients that needed them. READ MORE

  • Why does anesthesia cause people to shake when coming out of it?

    Shivering after surgery is indirectly caused by anesthesia. When a patient is put under general anesthesia, especially with inhalational anesthetics, their brain and it’s functions are temporarily “turned off”. This includes the area of the brain called the hypothalamus, which is responsible for many things. One of which is thermoregulation. Essentially our hypothalamus is our thermostat and it gets “turned off” during general anesthesia. By turning the thermostat off, the brain can’t respond to temperature changes. Operating rooms are typically kept cool, usually 65 degrees. So our body under general anesthesia begins to cool due to the ambient temperature being 30 degrees less. This is one of the responsibilities of your anesthesiologist. To prevent too much body temperature loss, the anesthesiologist often places a warming blanket over the parts of the body not being operated on. Most of these blankets have a large hose with hot air blowing into it (convection heating) Some have an electric heat source and heat by conduction. The anesthesiologist also often will warm IV fluids being administered by running the IV tubing through a warmed fluid tube. Finally, the anesthesiologist also uses a heat and moisture exchange unit (HME) added to the patients breathing circuit so that warm, humid exhaled gases heat and humidify the patients oxygen source. The reason for shivering upon awakening is that the hypothalamus retains its function, detects a cooler temperature than it last detected and sends signals to the musculoskeletal system to shiver to generate heat. (Same reason we shiver when we go out into the cold). Some general anesthetics (Total IV Anesthesia) that don’t use inhalational techniques preserve hypothalamic function and thus the brain is able to attempt to maintain heat by methods such as vasodilation and shunting of blood from warmer core areas to cooler peripheral areas of the body. I hope this answers your question. READ MORE

  • I'm having a nose job. Will the anesthesia affect my high blood pressure?

    Many patients have hypertension that are undergoing surgery. As long as your anesthesiologist is aware and knows what medicine you take for it, there should be no problem undergoing anesthesia and no problems with your blood pressure afterwards. READ MORE

  • If my anesthesia is delivered in the back, can its traces mix in the spinal fluid?

    That is actually the goal when delivering a spinal anesthetic. We place local anesthetic into the spinal fluid to achieve the desired numbness at the level the medication is placed and below. The local anesthetic is completely metabolized in the spinal fluid in 1-4 hours, depending on which anesthetic is used. READ MORE

  • Can three epidurals be a problem?

    There is no more risk with the 3rd as there would be if it’s your first. Many patients have undergone many epidural or spinal anesthetics. There is no evidence of a cumulative effect. READ MORE

  • Why was my son given anesthesia for a CT scan?

    Yes. CT scans require complete stillness to get an adequate study. Children often have difficulty being still for a variety of reasons: they may be frightened by all the equipment and strangers, they may be in pain, or simply because they are children and are a bundle of energy. In those situations the anesthetic is very brief and very safe. READ MORE

Areas of expertise and specialization

Anesthesia for Spine SurgeryObstetric AnesthesiaRegional Anesthesia

Faculty Titles & Positions

  • Local Public Speaking -

Professional Memberships

  • American Society of Anesthesiologists  
  • American Medical Association  
  • Indiana state Medical association  
  • Indiana Society of Anesthesiologists  

Charities and Philanthropic Endeavors

  • Operation Walk

Internships

  • Traditional at Michigan State University- Ingham Medical Center, Lansing, MI

Professional Society Memberships

  • Indiana State Medical Association, American Society of Anesthesiologists

What do you attribute your success to?

  • Passion for the field, learning new things and making a difference.

Philanthropic Initiatives

  • Indiana University Varsity Club

    Indiana University School of Law, Stephen W. Kellams Memorial Endowment

    Traders Point Christian Church

    Operation Walk Nicaragua Medical Missions

Teaching and speaking

  • Regional promotional speaker for Precedex, a Hospira pharmaceutical

    Course Director and Practical Instructor, Ultrasound Guided Regional Anesthesia, Medical Academic Center, Carmel, IN

    Anesthesia for Outpatient Spine Surgery, Beckers Ortho-Spine Conference, Chicago, Il June 2017

Hobbies / Sports

  • Traveling, Tennis

Favorite professional publications

  • Anesthesiology, Anesthesia & Analgesia

Dr. Michael A. Kellams DO's Practice location

St Vincent Hospitals

2001 W 86th St -
Indianapolis, IN 46260
Get Direction
New patients: 317-338-2162, 317-567-2180, 317-338-2345
Fax: 317-567-2191

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ST VINCENT HEART CENTER OF INDIANA LLCl

10580 N MERIDIAN ST INDIANAPOLIS IN 46290

Head southeast on John Ambers Lane 350 ft
Turn left onto Harcourt Road 1013 ft
Turn right onto West 86th Street 1.5 mi
Turn left onto Spring Mill Road 1.0 mi
Enter the roundabout and take the 2nd exit onto Springmill Road 1806 ft
Enter the roundabout and take the 1st exit onto Illinois Street 2903 ft
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ORTHOINDY HOSPITALl

8400 NORTHWEST BLVD INDIANAPOLIS IN 46278

Head southeast on John Ambers Lane 350 ft
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Turn left onto West 86th Street 3.8 mi
Turn left onto Northwest Boulevard 917 ft
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INDIANA UNIVERSITY HEALTH NORTH HOSPITALl

11700 N MERIDIAN ST CARMEL IN 46032

Head southeast on John Ambers Lane 350 ft
Turn left onto Harcourt Road 1013 ft
Turn right onto West 86th Street 1.9 mi
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Take the ramp on the right 2073 ft
Enter the roundabout and take the 3rd exit onto West 116th Street 1613 ft
Enter the roundabout and take the 1st exit onto North Illinois Street 1073 ft
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Turn right 482 ft
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