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Query: UMLS:C0019270 (
hernia
)
15,856
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
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
Among 327 surgical repairs of incisional hernias done between 1974 and 1989, 68 repairs (21%) were performed because of a primary treatment failure. Failed primary attempts of cure had been unique in 71%, and multiple in 29% of cases; their procedure had been essentially suture or herniorrhaphy. Site of recurrent incisional
hernia
(R.I.H.), was midline or lateral incision in respectively 84% and 16% of cases. Size of R.I.H. was considered as large in two third of cases. Operation was performed electively in majority of cases (93%). More than half of the patients were "prepared" by preoperative pneumoperitoneum and/or weight reducing regimen. Mersilene* mesh was used in 81% of cases. Results of treatment of R.I.H. are reported, depending on procedure. Among 55 cures by use of Mersilene* mesh, 1 patient died (from
myocardial infarction
), and 5 recurrences occurred, 4 of which from sepsis. Study of complications and failures suggests: 1) careful attention to indications, 2) advantages of a large size Mersilene* mesh, 3) attention to preoperative treatment, especially weight loss regimen and progressive pneumoperitoneum.
...
PMID:[The repair of recurrent postoperative incisional hernias. Objectives and therapeutic indications (68 cases)]. 214 45
Sixteen cases of traumatic disruption of the right hemidiaphragm are presented. Six tears were treated in the acute post-trauma phase and ten were detected from late manifestations. The causal trauma was penetrating in 11 cases and blunt in five. Rupture of the right hemidiaphragm not uncommonly occurs without serious associated injuries. Bowel often herniates through such tears, unhindered by the liver, though the liver is the most commonly herniating organ. No recurrence of
hernia
was found after standard repair techniques (mean follow-up 5.2 years). Three of the 16 patients died, one from associated injury, one from strangulation of herniated bowel and one from postoperative
myocardial infarction
. To demonstrate diaphragmatic tearing and subsequent organ herniation, serial chest radiographs and computed tomography are useful, and exploratory laporotomy should be done without delay after penetrating injury to the trunk. The treatment of diaphragmatic tear is surgical, with better results from early than from late repair.
...
PMID:Traumatic rupture of the right hemidiaphragm. 373 39
Complications following major abdominal surgery incur considerable expense. The aims of this study were to analyse prospectively the costs of complications following major abdominal surgery and to compare such costs with those of elective distal large bowel resection. Six patients undergoing elective resection for large bowel cancer were studied at the Royal South Hants Hospital between January and March 1983. The mean cost of resection and primary anastomosis, without postoperative complications, was pounds 1,364 (n = 4). Indirect costs accounted for 38%, nursing 25%, medical staff 13%, investigations 8% and consumables 16%. The operation itself accounted for 12% of the total. Complications following major abdominal surgery were studied in a further ten patients. The costs of complications not prolonging hospital stay were: wound infection pounds 64-146; chest infection pounds 21-27; urinary infection pounds 3-6. Complications prolonging hospital stay resulted in considerably greater cost: pelvic abscess pounds 1245;
myocardial infarction
pounds 476; subphrenic abscess pounds 857; colostomy retraction pounds 764; wound dehiscence pounds 599; incisional
hernia
pounds 1723, and major chest infection pounds 258. Owing to high fixed costs, the main factor in determining cost for bowel resection and complications was length of hospital stay.
...
PMID:Postoperative complications: how much do they cost? 378 5
Five cases of extensive infarction of lymph nodes were traced in just over 16 years' surgical material. All presented with painful swelling in a superficial lymph node chain. None was diagnosed clinically; two were interpreted as fibroadenoma of the axillary tail of the breast, and two as a femoral
hernia
. Microscopically the lymph nodes in the first three weeks after infarction were characterized by extensive necrosis of medullary and cortical lymphoid cells, but the central reticulin architecture and a narrow, incomplete rim of viable subcapsular lymphoid tissue were preserved. Reactive perinodal inflammation and the formation of granulation tissue resembled the reaction to
myocardial infarction
. The late stage of the lesion was characterized by incomplete regeneration of lymphoid tissue in the lymph nodes. The lesions appeared attributable to thrombosis of veins within the substance and the hila of the nodes.
...
PMID:Spontaneous infarction of superficial lymph nodes. 507 4
This article describes a method for measuring the performance of clinicians treating patients with unilateral inguinal hernia or
myocardial infarction
. The scoring was based upon the percentage of occasions when appropriate education was given and acute conditions resolved in accordance with clinical expectations. The method was applied to patients of general surgical and general medical firms at two London teaching hospitals in 1972 and 1975. Scores for samples of each diagnosis correlated significantly with subjective evaluations of care by clinicians. Multiple regression was used to identify and weight the patient risk factors (physiological and demographic) significantly associated with lower scores in each disease. Score of patients with these risks were adjusted upward to compensate for the difficulty of achieving good clinical results when these risks were present. Comparison of firms was based upon adjusted scores. Being older and being single, widowed or divorced were significant in both diseases. High blood pressure and anemia were also significantly associated with lower scores for
hernia
patients, as were the number of cigarettes smoked for infarction patients. The range of scores was wide in surgical firms in both years. While relatively narrow in the medical firms, scores suggest that there is still scope for improvement in some firms. The authors discuss a plan for using these data to arrive at score standards for each disease which could be used to screen clinical care routinely.
...
PMID:Measuring the quality of clinical performance with hernia and myocardial infarction patients, controlling for patient risks. 721 93
Laparoscopic cholecystectomy is replacing open cholecystectomy in the surgical management of gallstone disease in healthy individuals. However, the role of laparoscopic cholecystectomy in patients thought to be at higher risk for surgical morbidity is still being defined. The course of patients aged 65 or greater who underwent attempted and successful laparoscopic cholecystectomies were reviewed. Eleven patients (12%) were converted from laparoscopic to open cholecystectomy. For the 83 patients completing laparoscopic cholecystectomy, the median time of surgery was 115 min and the median length of postoperative stay was 1 day. Two patients required parenteral analgesia longer than 48 h. Seven patients were admitted and monitored postoperatively, although five of these were preoperatively planned. Five patients were readmitted within 30 days. One patient was admitted with a
myocardial infarction
, one a subphrenic abscess, one an incarcerated
hernia
, one with pyrexia and leukocytosis (for which no source was identified), and one for an elective urinary tract procedure. Laparoscopic cholecystectomy provides patients aged 65 or older the same benefits of shorter hospital stay and less pain than it provides younger patients. Age alone should not be a contraindication to attempted laparoscopic cholecystectomy.
...
PMID:Laparoscopic cholecystectomy in patients aged 65 or older. 834 73
Diverticula of the thoracic esophagus are uncommon disorders. The indications for surgical intervention in asymptomatic or minimally symptomatic patients are unclear. Among 20 patients referred during a 20-year period, 6 were male and 14 female, with a median age of 65 years. Two had had previous diverticulectomies. Dysphagia was present in 9 (45%) and regurgitation in 11 (55%). Nine patients had severe nocturnal cough with symptoms of aspiration. In two of these nine and in three other patients (25%), pulmonary symptoms were the only manifestation of disease, with no or minimal esophageal symptoms. In one patient the diagnosis of the presence of bronchial asthma for several years was incorrect; one patient had massive aspiration before
hernia
repair, in one a bronchoesophageal fistula and lung abscess developed, and two had severe persistent cough. All patients had a diagnostic barium esophagogram and endoscopy. Operation was performed in 17 patients, whereas three others declined operation. There was one hospital death. Follow-up is complete on 17 of 19 patients until June 1991. All operative survivors but one are free of symptoms. Of three patients refusing operation, one died of aspiration pneumonia, another died of
myocardial infarction
, and one with severe dysphagia is living. Because of the prevalence of aspiration (45%) and the potential for life-threatening pulmonary complications in some patients (15%), we conclude that operative intervention should be undertaken in all patients with thoracic esophageal diverticula regardless of the presence or absence of symptoms.
...
PMID:Thoracic esophageal diverticula. Why is operation necessary? 842 53
The complications of laparoscopic paraesophageal hernia repair at two institutions were reviewed to determine the rate and type of complications. A total of 76 patients underwent laparoscopic paraesophageal hernia repair between December 1992 and April 1996. Seventy-one of them had fundoplication (6 required a Collis-Nissen procedure). Five patients underwent
hernia
reduction and gastropexy only. There was one conversion to laparotomy. Traumatic visceral injury occurred in eight patients (11%) (gastric lacerations in 3, esophageal lacerations in 2, and bougie dilator perforations in 3). All lacerations were repaired intraoperatively except for one that was not recognized until postoperative day 2. Vagus nerve injuries occurred in at least three patients. Three delayed perforations occurred in the postoperative period (4%) (2 gastric and 1 esophageal). Two patients had pulmonary complications, two had gastroparesis, and one had fever of unknown origin. Seven patients required reoperation for gastroparesis (n = 2), dysphagia after mesh hiatal closure of the hiatus (n = 1), or recurrent herniation (n = 4). There were two deaths (3%): one from septic complications and one from
myocardial infarction
. Paraesophageal hernia repair took significantly longer (3.7 hours) than standard fundoplication (2.5 hours) in a concurrent series (P <0.05). Laparoscopic paraesophageal hernia repair is feasible but challenging. The overall complication rate, although significant, is lower than that for nonsurgically managed paraesophageal hernia.
...
PMID:Complications of laparoscopic paraesophageal hernia repair. 983 51
In order to evaluate the short- and long-term complications of obesity surgery, a review was done on 452 cases of morbidly obese patients who met the basic guidelines for obesity surgery and were operated upon; gastric bypass was performed in all of them. There were seven major complications: one
myocardial infarction
, two pulmonary embolisms, two gastric fistulas, one sepals from bowel infection and one acute thrombocytopenia purpura. Five of the patients died. It is important to note, in those patients with abdominal complications, the absence of classical signs and symptoms of peritonitis, and the need to act immediately in order to solve the postoperative problem. As in other series, minor complications were also present: subcutaneous infection in 18 cases,
hernia
in four, peptic syndrome in three, mild anemia in 28 and hypovitaminosis A and B in 58; all received medical treatment without problem. It is concluded that obesity surgery, like all major surgery in high-risk patients, may have complications, and therefore It is necessary to recognize them in order to prevent them, and if they emerge, diagnose and treat properly.
...
PMID:Post-operative Complications in a Series of Gastric Bypass Patients. 1076 70
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