The Weight of Precision - A Surgeon's Life in the Space Between Faith and Flesh

Author:   Claudio Salvatore Cinà
Publisher:   Draft2Digital
ISBN:  

9798215216378


Pages:   246
Publication Date:   10 March 2026
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
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The Weight of Precision - A Surgeon's Life in the Space Between Faith and Flesh


Overview

In the cold gleam of the operating room, before the scalpel's first whisper against skin, Claudio Salvatore Cinà is still a man - a father, a Sicilian, a seeker shaped by volcanic dust and his Carabiniere father's unyielding discipline. Then the blade descends, and something shifts. The person recedes; what remains is a function: hands, eyes, decisions calibrated to the narrow space between life and death. Later - if there is a later - he becomes human again. That is the surgeon's eternal bargain: to shed humanity for the sake of saving it, only to reclaim it afterward, heavier with the ghosts of what was cut away. The Weight of Precision traces Cinà's journey from the itinerant villages of southern Sicily to the high-stakes theatres of global medicine. Born in Gela in 1953, the son of Pietro Cinà, a state officer whose silent posture taught more than words ever could, young Claudio absorbed a culture of service amid constant relocations. Pedalino's farmyard dust, Barrafranca's ancient tombs, Siracusa's classical rigour - these formed the unseen scaffolding of a mind that would one day navigate the human aorta at its most lethal. The memoir unfolds across continents and decades. Boston's Harvard-affiliated halls under Hermes Grillo, where ambition met American precision. Bristol's understated mastery with Horrocks, who taught calm as a surgical instrument. Toronto, where Cinà built a family amid ruptured aneurysms and institutional politics. And Houston's furnace under Stanley Crawford, where thoracoabdominal aortic surgery revealed itself as the discipline's most unforgiving test. Each city was a language; each apprenticeship left its mark on the hands and on the soul. He built pioneering programmes, trained surgeons who now surpass him, and confronted the ancient model of apprenticeship - its brutality, its beauty, its slow extinction - asking what the profession has found to put in its place. Yet success exacted its toll. A dissolved marriage. Fatherhood practised at a distance. The hypervigilance that Houston etched into his nervous system. And patients whose stories became mirrors: Giuseppe, whose flawless operation ended in midnight arrest; Elena, who endured seven surgeries with unbreakable spirit; Mr. Rossi, whose tomatoes delayed intervention until it was nearly too late. Through them, Cinà confronts the question that no technical mastery can settle: what is saved when a body survives but a life fractures? At the centre of the narrative stands a rupture no training could have prepared him for. In 2014, a brainstem stroke felled the surgeon mid-stride. The hands that had navigated the most dangerous vessel in the human body could not hold a pen. Recovery was slow, humbling, and radiant with strange clarity. From that threshold emerged reinvention: coaching young athletes with Down syndrome through ""Una Sudata per un Sorriso,"" writing Medical Ethics: The Surgeon's Perspective(Springer Nature, 2025), and returning to Catania's quieter consultations with partner Mariagrazia - embracing the mycorrhizal threads that connect a life's scattered fragments, from Pedalino's ants to Houston's clamps, from paternal absences to podium embraces in Budapest. Dedicated to his three children - Isabella, Margherita, and Davide - this memoir is not an apology but an offering: the interior of a life they witnessed only from the outside. In prose that moves between the clinical and the contemplative, warm with Mediterranean light and unflinching before the silence where faith and flesh meet, The Weight of Precisionjoins the company of Henry Marsh, Paul Kalanithi, and Atul Gawande while carrying a voice entirely its own. It asks the question every vocation eventually demands: was it worth it? And in its honest accounting - not in conquest but in the threads that endure - it finds its answer.

Full Product Details

Author:   Claudio Salvatore Cinà
Publisher:   Draft2Digital
Imprint:   Draft2Digital
Dimensions:   Width: 14.00cm , Height: 1.30cm , Length: 21.60cm
Weight:   0.290kg
ISBN:  

9798215216378


Pages:   246
Publication Date:   10 March 2026
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

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Author Information

Claudio Salvatore Cinà was born in Gela, Sicily, in 1953, the son of a Carabiniere whose transfers across the island gave him his first education in adaptability, observation, and service. He studied medicine at the University of Catania, graduating summa cum laude in 1978, and began a surgical career that would span five countries over four decades. His training took him to Boston's Harvard-affiliated institutions under thoracic surgery pioneer Hermes Grillo, to Bristol under the mentorship of James Horrocks, and to Houston's Methodist Hospital, where he completed a fellowship in thoracoabdominal aortic surgery under Stanley Crawford and Denton Cooley. He held academic appointments at McMaster University and the University of Toronto, where he rose to Full Professor and served as Head of the Division of Vascular Surgery at St. Michael's Hospital. At the Cleveland Clinic, he contributed to the development of endovascular techniques that would reshape the discipline. Throughout, he built surgical programmes, trained the next generation, and published extensively on vascular surgery, evidence-based medicine, and surgical education. In 2014, a brainstem stroke interrupted his career and reoriented his intellectual life. Recovery led him toward medical ethics, philosophical reflection, and writing. His volume Medical Ethics: The Surgeon's Perspective was published by Springer Nature in 2025. He is actively involved in international research on surgical training reform and has documented the crisis in European surgical education through collaborative studies spanning multiple countries. Beyond medicine, Cinà founded ""Una Sudata per un Sorriso,"" a sports programme coaching young athletes with Down syndrome through competitive indoor rowing - an endeavour born from his own experience of physical rebuilding after stroke. He is also a writer of literary nonfiction whose work explores the intersections of science, ethics, identity, and faith. He lives in Catania, Sicily, with his partner Mariagrazia. His three children - Isabella, Margherita, and Davide - live abroad in Brussels, Toronto, and Vancouver. The Weight of Precision is his first memoir.

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