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Query: UMLS:C0019270 (hernia)
15,856 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Twenty-nine patients who underwent Nissen fundoplication for the treatment of symptomatic, sliding, esophageal hiatal hernia are reported. Fourteen of these patients also underwent parietal cell vagotomy (PCV) without a drainage procedure. Simulatenous cineradiography and manometric studies, esophagoscopy and gastric analysis were performed pre- and postoperatively. Esophageal acid clearing and pH reflux studies were performed postoperatively. All but 3 patients had reflux and/or esophagitis preoperatively. Cineradiography and the pH reflux test were the most reliable tests for diagnosis of reflux. There was no operative mortality. The mean followup period was 20 months. Dysphagia occurred in 5 patients. Correction of dysphagia in one patient required operation. The dysphagia in the remaining patients was temporary and mild, responding to dilatation. Two patients had mild diarrhea. One patient who had had a previous gastric resection developed severe diarrhea after bilateral truncal vagotomy. No patient developed the "bloat syndrome". A close correlation did not exist between reflux and preoperative sphincter pressure. The mean LES pressure increased 10 mmH2O postoperatively and the two patients with persistent reflux postoperatively had normal LES pressure. Correction of reflux after Nissen fundoplication is probably due to some mechanism other than increased LES pressure. Recurrent or persistent hiatal hernia was diagnosed in 4 patients by cineradiography. Two of these patients had reflux but only the patient who had undergone PCV was without symptoms or esophagitis. The technical performance of the Nissen hiatal hernia repair was greatly facilitat ed by PCV. This procedure also provided adequate treatment for patients with concomitant duodenal ulcer disease. PCV, unaccompanied by a drainage procedure, was not associated with increased morbidity, mortality or the adverse effects usually attributed to vagotomy. In the event of recurrent hernia and reflux, PCV may prevent the development of esophagitis.
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PMID:Evaluation of the Nissen fundoplication for treatment of hiatal hernia: use of parietal cell vagotomy without drainage as an adjunctive procedure. 23 37

This is an interim report of a prospective, randomized study involving 194 consecutive patients who underwent elective operation for treatment of duodenal ulcer. The results of parietal cell vagotomy without drainage (PCV) and selective vagotomy-antrectomy and Billroth I anastomosis (SV-A-B I) were compared. There was no mortality. Postoperatively patients were examined at two, six, 12 months and every 12 months thereafter. The two operations showed no statistical difference in the frequency of diarrhea. Dumping was less (p < .01) after PCV than after SV-A-B I. Weight loss was less (p < .01) after PCV than after SV-A-B I. There were no recurrent ulcers after SV-A-B I and five after PCV. In each instance but one the recurrent ulcer healed on withdrawal of an ulcerogenic drug. One patient required reoperation. Reoperations in the PCV group consisted of one for recurrent ulcer, one for gastric outlet obstruction and three for intestinal obstruction. The reoperations after SV-A-B I consisted of four for gastric outlet obstruction, three for intestinal obstruction, one for ruptured spleen and two for incisional hernia. PCV was technically feasible and practical to perform except in the occasional patient with severe pyloric stenosis. Obesity was never a deterrent. After PCV it is reasonable to assume that a recurrent ulcer rate in the range of 5-10% can be expected by surgeons who have been properly trained. This recurrence rate is higher than that after SV-A-B I but no higher than that encountered with TV-P. The recurrence rate is acceptable and is a fair exchange for the avoidance of dumping and weight loss that accompany SV-A-B I with significantly greater frequency and which on occasion can produce gastric crippling, although this did not occur in this study. All recurrent ulcers after PCV do not require reoperation but when operative treatment is required the patient has all the options that he had prior to PCV.
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PMID:An interim report on parietal cell vagotomy versus selective vagotomy and antrectomy for treatment of duodenal ulcer. 44 16

The authors describe a truly uncommon case of internal abdominal hernia attributable to malformation of the falciform ligament. The patient, a man aged 26, had complained in the past of cramping pain in the epigastric region, usually occurring after meals and sometimes ending with vomiting of ingested food; but all diagnostic methods and procedures had consistently ruled out any extant pathology of the stomach, duodenum, biliary tract, or pancreas. Present hospitalization was justified by a clinical picture suggesting peritonitis from perforated gastric or duodenal ulcer. At operation the authors found a strangulated loop of small intestine following left-to-right migration through a hole in the falciform ligament of the liver. In the authors' interpretation the background cause of the trouble was incomplete development of the falciform ligament, and the immediate cause of the acute episode was abnormal motility and exaggerated peristalsis of the ileum, possibly due to the presence of a diverticulum; the latter two conditions are invoked as a possible explanation for the repeated episodes of abdominal pain in the patient's history.
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PMID:[Internal abdominal hernia caused by anomaly of the falciform ligament (a case report)]. 55 70

The author studied the condition of the esophagogastric junction in 376 patients with gastric and duodenal ulcer before and in the late-term periods after selective proximal vagotomy and distal resection of the stomach performed in combination with antireflux interventions on the cardia (fundoesophagorrhaphy, crurorrhaphy+fundoesophagophrenorrhaphy, fundoplication) or without such interventions. It is shown that reliable correction of the obturator mechanism of the cardia in selective proximal vagotomy may be achieved only by fundoplication. In gastric resection fundoplication is advisable in marked reflux esophagitis, distention of the hiatus esophageus of third degree, hernia of the hiatus esophageus, and cardiac ulcer. In all other patients with distal resection of the stomach crurorrhaphy+fundoesophagophrenorrhaphy is justified as a preventive measure.
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PMID:[Choice of the method of cardial correction during selective proximal vagotomy and gastric resection]. 147

A 10-year experience with 2,441 patients over 65 years of age undergoing operations for non-upper gastrointestinal tracts was reviewed to evaluate both the incidence of postoperative upper gastrointestinal bleeding and the clinical risk factors associated with the complication. A total of 18 (0.7%, 7 males and 11 females) patients had overt postoperative upper gastrointestinal bleeding of non-variceal origin documented by endoscopic findings or blood transfusions. Of these, the complication developed in 10 (1.5%) of 646 patients after an operation for biliary or pancreatic disease, 1 (1.5%) of 64 for aneurysmal or obstructive arterial disease, 5 (1.1%) of 43 for colorectal cancer and 2 (0.3%) of 916 for hernia. The incidences of bleeding after an operation for obstructive jaundice (3.8%), for biliary or pancreatic malignancy (4.5%), and of unavoidable diversion colostomy for colorectal anastomosis (3.1%) were significantly higher than for non-jaundice (0.6%), for non-malignancy (1.1%) and of postoperative upper gastrointestinal bleeding in the present study. The origins of bleeding were gastric ulcer in 11, acute gastric mucosal lesion in 4, duodenal ulcer in 1 and other in 2. All cases of bleeding were treated and met success in hemostasis using H2-blockers. Of these, however, 5 patients died of multiple organ failure despite discontinued hemorrhage, prophylactic use of H2-blockers showed a decrease in occurrence of postoperative upper gastrointestinal bleeding in the present study.
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PMID:[Post operative upper gastrointestinal bleeding in the aged]. 149 79

The site and nature of lesions producing gastrointestinal bleeding was evaluated in pediatric patients admitted to Tokai University Hospital. The differential diagnosis was possible based upon the character of the bleeding and the age of the patient. Upper endoscopy is the diagnostic maneuver of choice in evaluating the upper gastrointestinal bleeders. Sigmoidoscopy, colonoscopy, technetium scans, tagged red cell scans and intraoperative angiography were helpful in locating bleeding sites of lower bleeders. Common causes of bleeding were as follows: Hemorrhagic disease, necrotizing enterocolitis, and midgut volvulus in neonates; intussusception and internal hernia in infants; juvenile polyp and infectious diarrhea in children; duodenal ulcer and ulcerative colitis in adolescents. Gastro-duodenal ulcers were found in all age groups. One neonate died of indomethacin induced bleeding, however, bleeding from acute ulcer was usually controlled by conservative treatments. Increasing frequency of variceal bleeding due to portal hypertension after successful Kasai procedure for congenital biliary atresia was emphasized.
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PMID:[Gastrointestinal bleeding in children]. 258 65

In the Royal Navy, after surgery, the time that servicemen spend away from work and the level of duty to which they return are decisions made by the surgeon, not the general practitioner. In a prospective study, we have thus been able to assess the acceptability of return to full duty at decreasing intervals after highly selective vagotomy (HSV). Seventy-eight servicemen who underwent HSV for duodenal ulcer were studied in three periods, 1978-1980, 1981-1982, 1983-1986, each with a shorter interval to return to duty. There were no differences in the rates of ulcer recurrence, incisional hernia, or ability to perform full duties. After HSV the mean time to return to full duties for each group was 29.3, 16.4, and 4.2 weeks, respectively. Every patient returned to full duties at 28 days was able to perform any assigned task whether at sea or ashore.
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PMID:Early return to work following highly selective vagotomy. 260 40

The Angelchik prosthesis was used in 26 cases of gastroesophageal reflux disease resistant to medical therapy. The operations were crowned with success in 24 cases out of 26 (92.3%), with complete disappearance of reflux. The procedure failed in two cases: the prosthesis was removed in one case due to postoperative acute haemorrhagic gastritis with a subsequent positive outcome; in this patient the Angelchik ring had been removed as a precaution. Failure in the second case, a patient with oesophageal stenosis and a short oesophagus, was due to mediastinal migration of the prosthesis. In this latter case, a successful duodenal bypass was created with antrectomy and a long Roux-en-Y anastomosis. The only intraoperative complication in the patient sample was a splenectomy for rupture of the splenic capsule. Postoperative complications not directly related to the prosthesis were perforation of a duodenal ulcer not diagnosed preoperatively and treated with raphia without impairing the functional efficacy of the ring, one case of pulmonary embolism and one case of cardiac infarction, all resolved with medical therapy. In all, the prostheses were removed in 3 cases out of 26 (11.5%). In addition to the two cases already described, the prosthesis was removed in one patient one year after the operation at the patient's specific request for "psychological" reasons. Migration of the prosthesis occurred in four cases of severe oesophageal stenosis with a short oesophagus, in three of which the prosthesis functioned perfectly even in the intrathoracic site. At follow-up examinations there was radiological disappearance of the hiatal hernia in 20 cases out of 25. In one case there was no hernia even before the operation, and in four cases there was a short oesophagus with severe oesophagitis. Owing to the very easy performance of the operation together with its unquestionable antireflux efficacy, in our opinion three reliable indications emerge, namely: (i) in elderly patients at high surgical risk; (ii) in obese, brachytypical patients; and (iii) in the presence of severe oesophagitis, even with a short oesophagus.
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PMID:[Our experience on the use of the antireflux prosthesis by the Angelchik method (personal contribution of 26 cases)]. 263 19

Living related liver transplantation offers several advantages in comparison to transplantation of cadaver organs. To achieve maximal donor safety evaluation, selection criteria and complications of the donor operation were retrospectively analyzed in living donors of segmental liver transplants. Seventy-three liver donor candidates were evaluated between October 1991 and June 1994. The median age of 42 mothers and 31 fathers was 31 years (range, 19-50 years). The median volume of the left lateral liver lobe comprised 230 ml (100-350 ml). Twenty-four of 73 (33%) donor candidates were not accepted for living donation. Rejection was due to unsuitability of the donor's liver as a graft (n = 13) or due to an increased risk for living donation (n = 11). Of 35 living donations performed so far, one was a full left hemihepatectomy and 34 were left lateral segmentectomies. The length of the donor operation was, on average, 4.3 hr. No heterologous blood was needed. Postoperative complications included death due to pulmonary embolism (n = 1), seizure due to a previously undiagnosed ependymoma (n = 1), bile duct injury (n = 1), incisional hernia necessitating late revision (n = 2), and duodenal ulcer (n = 2). Long-term follow-up revealed no persistent complications. Using our standardized protocol, 33% of young, presumably healthy donor candidates were rejected for living donation.
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PMID:Selection of the living liver donor. 757 Sep 74

From May 1986 to May 1992, 55 patients with genitourinary prolapse were treated by total hysterectomy, sacral fixation using a prosthetic band and colposuspension. The mean age was 55.5 years (range: 38-78 years). Ten patients (18.8%) developed early postoperative complications: 2 wall haematomas, one surgical revision for haemorrhage, one case of haematemesis secondary to a duodenal ulcer, one intestinal obstruction due to dehiscence of the peritonealisation, two cases of acute urinary retention, one case of complete urinary incontinence, one septic shock and one wall abscess. Three patients (5.4%) developed late postoperative complications: intestinal obstruction secondary to a mesenteric band, one incisional hernia, and one case of pelvic pain. The mean length of hospital stay was 8.9 days (range: 7-25 days) and the mean follow-up was 36 months (range: 6-72 months). The anatomical result was excellent (complete correction of the prolapse and absence of recurrence) in 96.4% of cases. In terms of the functional results, 3 patients (5.4%) remained dysuric and 5 (9.1%) have persistent stress incontinence, either moderate (3 cases) or disabling (2 cases). Marked sphincter insufficiency was demonstrated on the urethral pressure profile in these last two cases. The combination of total hysterectomy with vaginal opening and sacral fixation using a prosthetic band prevents the risk of subsequent disease of the remaining cervix and does not appear to increase the risk of infection or the postoperative morbidity. Without advocating systematic hysterectomy in the sacral fixation technique, we nevertheless believe that it is preferable to perform total hysterectomy rather than supraisthemic hysterectomy when this procedure is indicated.
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PMID:[The treatment of genito-urinary prolapse with promonto-fixation using a prosthetic material combined with complete hysterectomy: complications and results apropos of a series of 55 cases]. 771 68


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