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Query: UMLS:C0019270 (
hernia
)
15,856
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The complication rate in jejunoileal bypass for morbid obesity is unacceptably high. Gastric bypass is technically difficult. In our series, 115 patients have undergone gastric partitioning for morbid obesity. The operation consists of stapling across the stomach below the gastroesophageal junction, leaving a gastric food reservoir of 50--60 cc. A 1 cm opening is left in the central portion of the staple line, allowing slow emptying into the distal stomach. The result is a reduced eating capacity and frequency which produce loss in weight. Three-quarters of the patients are women, and the age range is 17--62 years. Preoperative weights averaged 147 kg. Mean operative time was 48 minutes, and postoperative stay was 6.2 days. All patients were extensively evaluated preoperatively with upper GI series, cholecystogram, a number of blood chemistry tests, and endocrinologic and psychiatric consultations. All patients underwent a preoperative Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory test. Cholecystectomy for
cholelithiasis
was performed on 18% of the patients at the time of operation. Of the seven patients operated on more than one year ago, five have lost an average of 31.6% of their preoperative weight. Of the 12 operated on less than one year but more than six months ago, eight have lost an average of 21% of their initial weight. The early failure rate of 33% has been reduced to 15% at present. One death occurred from pulmonary embolus 10 days following discharge, giving a mortality rate of .08%. The complication rate is 10%, comprising two pulmonary emboli, two psychoses, one wound dehiscence, one wound
hernia
, and ten wound infections, six of which were minor. There have been no complications of ulcer disease, reflux esophagitis, liver disease, renal disease, or metabolic disorders. Gastric partitioning is a safe, fast effective alternative for the surgical treatment of morbid obesity.
...
PMID:Gastric partitioning for morbid obesity. 48 14
Abdominal wound healing was studied in 48 patients undergoing laparotomy for jaundice and 281 anicteric patients undergoing elective operations for
cholelithiasis
at the Sheffield Royal Infirmary during the period 1967 to 1976. Wound dehiscence or incisional
hernia
occurred in 27.1 per cent of jaundiced patients and in 4.3 per cent of anicteric patients (P less than 0.001). There was a slightly higher incidence of dehiscence and herniation in deeply icteric patients (plasma bilirubin greater than 170 mu mol/l), but patients who developed these complications did not appear to have a more severe degree of malnutrition or impaired liver function. The results of the study suggest that malignant disease may be an important factor in the pathogenesis of wound complications in jaundiced patients. Wound dehiscence or incisional
hernia
occurred in 59.1 per cent of patients with obstructive jaundice resulting from malignant disease but patients with jaundice resulting from biliary stones or benign pathology did not develop these complications.
...
PMID:Abdominal wound healing in jaundiced patients. 66 51
125 cases of
hernia
,
cholelithiasis
, peptic and gastric ulcer, carcinoma of the stomach of stages III and IV were examined before operation and in the postoperative period. The peculiarity of the studied indices of energy metabolism was established in each group of patients. The authors believe, that the difinition of ATP level and of the erythrocytes energy charge can be used as one of criteria of patients' condition and of medicamental correction of metabolism.
...
PMID:[Macroergic phosphate metabolism of the erythrocytes in the early postoperative period]. 91 24
Since 1962, jejunoileal bypass has been performed on 59 male and 171 female subjects, aged 18 to 55 years; these patients were followed clinically. Postoperative weight loss at two years averaged 37% in men and 35% in women. Hypokalemia (23%), hypocalcemia (22%), hypoalbuminemia (9%), metabolic acidosis (14%), elevated liver enzyme values (41%), and hyperbilirubinemia (6%), were the most commonly encountered blood chemical alterations. Complications were arthritis syndrome (men, 8%; women, 19%). urinary calculi (men, 24%; women, 10%),
cholelithiasis
(men, 10%; women, 9%), liver impairment (men, 2%; women, 6%), and major emotional upset (men, 8%; women, 9%). Forty-nine percent of the men and 51% of the women required rehospitalization for management of complications, surgery for
hernia
, anorectal disorders, nutritional support, and metabolic study. There were 19 bypass-related deaths (8%), including 10 due to liver failure.
...
PMID:Intestinal bypass surgery for morbid obesity. Long-term results. 98 31
The significant increase in the number of people older than seventy forces the physician to be acquainted with both psychological and physical alterations induced by aging and to devote an ever increasing proportion of time for recognition and treatment os such alterations. In the medical sense, the biological and physiological age is more important than the chronological age. With increasing age there is--especially concerning the digestive tract and its accessory organs--a rise in the incidence of organic affections and a decline in the frequency of functional disorders. Besides it is wise to know, that the increasing age there is often a coexistence of multiple degenerative disorders and disease states, involving many body systems and organs. On the background of this recognition it is also important to know, that prognosis too varies with age because of the coexistence of individually prognosticated disease states and moreover to realize, that elderly patients do not tolerate invasive and prolonged surgical procedures. Structural or functional disturbances of the digestive organs by aging processes do not cause death per se, but can become one important factor; degenerative sclerotic vascular alterations bear relationship to the poorly contractile vasculature that brings up difficulties in the control of hemorrhagic gastroduodenal ulcers. Many gastrointestinal disorders in elderly patients occur with an equal frequency in younger patients, some are more common in the geriatric population; these include hiatal hernia, carcinoma of esophagus, stomach, pancreas, bile ducts and colon, intestinal obstruction (ileus) by neoplastic growth,
gallstone
ileus, external
hernia
and operative adhesions and especially diverticular diseases of the colon and its complications and ischemic colitis by mesenteric vascular occlusion. Cirrhosis of the liver is often diagnosed for the first time in the older age groups while acute viral hepatitis uses to run a cholestatic course and is therefore often misdiagnosed as mechanical obstruction. In general history is difficult to obtain, the response of the organism with temperature and white blood count to stress is often delayed and rigidity associated with an underlying inflammatory disease involving the peritoneum is often delayed and rigidity associated with an underlying inflammatory disease involving the peritoneum is often atypical. Because of this limited reaction to severe stress, early surgical intervention is imperative in the elderly patients.
...
PMID:[Problems of the so-called geriatric gastrointestinal diseases]. 120 46
450 successive celioscopic cholecystectomies (May, 1990-April, 1992) are reported for 312 cases of uncomplicated
gallstone
(69%) operated electively and 138 cases operated in emergency, including 120 cases of acute cholecystitis, 17 cases of biliary pancreatitis and 1 case of angiocholitis. Immediate conversion into laparotomy was required in 10 cases (2.2%) either for technical reasons (1.1%) or because of lithiasis of the common bile duct (1.1%). The stay in hospital lasted an average of 2.2% days for elective admission and 3.3 days for emergent admission. The average operating time was 65 minutes (75 minutes until May, 1991, and 55 minutes between May, 1991 and April, 1992). Preoperative retrograde cholangiography was performed in 67 cases and intraoperative cholangiography in 16 cases. Second surgery was required for suture in one case because of cholerrhagia in a secondary duct of the gallbladder bed. This cholerrhagia would not have been amenable to simple aspiration. One patient (0.2%) died of myocardial infarction at D + 10. Complications include 4 cases of pulmonary embolism, 3 cases of cystic biliary fistula without second surgery and 4 cases of umbilical
hernia
. A more peculiar case is that of a patient admitted 5 months after surgery for gangrenous acute cholecystitis. This patient was admitted for fever and epigrastric pain. He had a very low-flow duodenocutaneous fistula of uncertain origin. This patient was not operated again. This may not be a complication connected to celioscopic surgery. Celioscopic cholecystectomy is superseding conventional cholecystectomy. Surgeons' efforts should strive at eliminating operative errors, reducing postoperative morbidity, improving techniques and instruments, teaching celioscopic surgery and extending its indications to other intraabdominal operations.
...
PMID:[Laparoscopic cholecystectomy. Apropos of 450 cases]. 134 88
Patients who are operated upon for cancer tumour are anxious about the postoperative information and the result of the surgical procedure. This investigation was undertaken to study the routines for postoperative information in a department of surgical oncology. Thirty two patients operated for abdominal cancer ("cancer patients") and 36 patients operated for inguinal hernia or
gallstone
disease ("hernia patients") answered a questionnaire with 16 questions. Sixty nine percent replied. The need for postoperative information about the result of the operation was higher for the cancer patients than for the
hernia
patients. The cancer patients were given more attention by the doctors postoperatively and were given more opportunities to ask about the operation than the
hernia
patients. However, there was lack of privacy in the information situation and both groups were informed on the ward in presence of other patients.
...
PMID:[Information to patients following surgery for cancer]. 156 40
Duodenogastric reflux (DRG) was quantified with continuous 24 hour monitoring of gastric pH in 30 patients, 12 of whom underwent operation for repair of an inguinal or femoral
hernia
used as a control group. The remaining 18 patients with noncomplicated
gallstone
disease underwent a simple cholecystectomy. Eight weeks after the operation, the tests were repeated. We found that patients with
cholelithiasis
were accompanied with DGR or alkaline shift more often than the patients in the control group and cholecystectomy decreased the percentage of time that gastric pH was less than two and increased the time at four and six. Although cholecystectomy itself does cause DGR, most patients with DGR may be asymptomatic.
...
PMID:A prospective study of the effect of cholecystectomy on duodenogastric reflux in humans using 24 hour gastric hydrogen monitoring. 162 Dec
The second European Atlas of Avoidable deaths, which will be shortly issued, concerns the period 1979-83 for Italy. The causes of deaths included were: tuberculosis, neoplasms of the cervix uteri and those of the uterus with no specified site, Hodgkin's disease, chronic rheumatic heart disease, hypertensive and cerebrovascular disease, childhood respiratory infections, asthma, appendicitis, abdominal
hernia
, cholecystitis and
cholelithiasis
, maternal and perinatal deaths. In Italy marked excesses for cholecystitis-
cholelithiasis
, Hodgkin's disease, hypertensive and cerebrovascular disease and perinatal mortality were observed. A remarkable decrease was observed in comparison with the first Atlas (1974-78); but the European countries generally maintained the differences amongst them and their rank. Proposals to assess the causes of the observed differences are suggested (death certificate quality evaluation studies, case-reference studies, cohort studies) and the role of confidential enquiries is discussed.
...
PMID:[Avoidable deaths in the evaluation of the performance of health services. II. European Atlas of avoidable deaths: initial data and several reflections]. 215 27
The hospital costs and clinical results of 304 patients who were more than 80 years old and who underwent general surgical procedures were evaluated. The over-all mortality rate was 14 per cent; 19.9 per cent occurred in patients admitted under emergency conditions as compared with 8.9 per cent that occurred in patients undergoing elective procedures (p less than 0.001). Seventy-nine per cent of the patients were discharged and 7 per cent required care in a skilled nursing facility. Survival rates were as good or better than standard life table survival rates for 80 year old patients. Costs were higher in those who were admitted under emergent conditions or who died in the hospital. Deaths were a result of complications of the primary disease rather than associated disease in most groups. Neither costs nor length of stay could accurately predict survival of individual patients. We concluded that health resources should be directed at treating problems, such as
cholelithiasis
,
hernia
or carcinoma, early before complications develop.
...
PMID:A comparison of hospital costs and morbidity between octogenarians and other patients undergoing general surgical operations. 221 34
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