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

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.
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PMID:Abdominal wound healing in jaundiced patients. 66 51

The relationship between nutritional status and umbilical hernia was assessed among Hausa and Yoruba school children in rural areas of Kwara State, Nigeria. The prevalence of umbilical hernia in the rural school pupils was 19.4%. The Yoruba school children had a higher prevalence rate of 22.0%, while the prevalence rate for Hausa pupils was 16.9%. The association between umbilical hernia and primary school class was statistically significant. More school children suffering from protein energy malnutrition presented with umbilical hernia. The association between umbilical hernia and nutritional status was weak. The school health component of the national primary health program should be intensified to screen school children regularly for umbilical hernia. The school health environment of rural Nigerian schools should be improved through government efforts.
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PMID:Nutritional status and umbilical hernia in Nigerian school children of different ethnic groups. 180 Jul 66

Home peritoneal dialysis has recently become an important addition to the therapy of chronic renal failure. Abdominal wall hernias have become more apparent as complications of this mode of dialysis, with isolated instances of incarcerations and one fatality. Results of our review of 276 patients receiving peritoneal dialysis revealed seven with hernias, an incidence of 2.5 per cent. Six patients with hernias were receiving c.a.p.d.; one patient was receiving c.c.p.d., and none was receiving i.p.d., for incidences of 17, 5 and zero per cent, respectively. All hernias found at presentation occurred within two to 20 months after peritoneal catheter placement. Most were ventral or umbilical, and all were repaired electively without serious complications. All patients with hernias had associated problems with leaks, peritonitis or predialysis hernias. In two of four patients with predialysis hernias, herniorrhaphy without catheter removal resulted in two recurrences. Abdominal wall hernias are a more frequent complication of c.a.p.d. and c.c.p.d., modalities which require large volumes of peritoneal dialysate during ambulatory hours. Review of the literature reveals that wound tensile strength and healing are decreased in those patients having renal disease with uremia, anemia and malnutrition. However, these factors do not increase the over-all incidence of hernias. Patients should be screened for hernias, and hernias should be repaired prior to catheter placement. Hernias presenting during dialysis are best treated by herniorrhaphy and hemodialysis postoperatively or low volume peritoneal dialysis to optimize the metabolic state.
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PMID:Abdominal wall hernias as a complication of peritoneal dialysis. 664 75

Percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy (PEG) is a well established procedure for establishing a feeding port in patients unable to take oral nutrition. As these patients are often elderly with multiple ailments, mortality due to comorbidities is common. This retrospective study reviewed the experience with PEG in a community hospital, with particular attention paid to morbidity and mortality rates. Randomly selected charts of 100 patients who had PEG performed at our hospital between 1987 and 1991 were examined. These records were reviewed for patients' age, gender, indications, intraoperative complications, and final disposition. Procedure-related morbidity was defined as any untoward event or death that could not be directly attributed to the patient's primary disease process. The sample consisted of 33 males and 67 females whose ages ranged from 47 to 102 years, with a mean of 82 years. The most common indications were malnutrition (n = 48) and dysphagia due to neurological problems (n = 38). The only procedure-related intraoperative complication involved a patient with uncomplicated umbilical hernia who developed strangulation. The morbidity rate was 4% and the 30-day mortality rate was 16%. Only one death was directly related to the PEG tube, and a second death was possibly related to the PEG tube. This community hospital's experience with PEG reveals low morbidity and mortality rates compared to Stamm gastrostomy. These results confirm that PEG is the procedure of choice for providing aging patients with a safe route for enteral nutrition.
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PMID:Percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy: a community hospital experience. 788 26

Chronic malnutrition and growth failure are features of severe dystrophic epidermolysis bullosa (DEB). Conventional dietetic intervention is of limited benefit. Oesophageal dilatation or reconstruction to alleviate stricture is associated with substantial risks. Surgical placement of a feeding gastrostomy is a comparatively straightforward procedure, provided that specialized anaesthetic and surgical techniques are employed. Gastrostomy insertion was undertaken in 18 children with severe DEB and the effects of this intervention were retrospectively evaluated. The majority received button devices (inserted primarily) and gastrostomy feeding supplemented oral intake. One year postoperatively, the average increase in weight standard deviation scores (SDS) of 13 patients was 0.9 SDS (95% confidence interval 0.44, 1.35) and in height 0.42 SDS (95% confidence interval 0.05, 0.79). One patient developed an incisional hernia and four patients experienced minor leakage around the gastrostomy entry site. Two patients never accepted their gastrostomies, which were therefore removed. Two further patients died for reasons unrelated to the procedure. Our observations suggest that gastrostomy feeding can play a valuable role in severe DEB and is associated with minimal morbidity. Such intervention is best undertaken before growth failure is established, and prior to puberty.
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PMID:Gastrostomy and growth in dystrophic epidermolysis bullosa. 873 28

The etiology of congenital diaphragmatic hernia (CDH) is not yet known. Studies in the literature from 1941 have reported that nutritional deficiency of vitamin A during pregnancy could lead to CDH, associated or not with other malformations in young rats. More recently, possible correlations between expression patterns of cellular retinoid-binding protein and retinoic-acid receptors and morphologic effects of vitamin A deficiency have been suggested. The purpose of this study was to verify in human newborns the possible link between vitamin A deficiency and CDH previously observed in experimental animals. Blood samples were obtained during the first hours after birth from 11 term CDH newborns and 11 healthy controls matched for gestational age, and also from 7 mothers in each group, for a total of 7 newborn-mother pairs of matched CDH-controls. Plasma retinol was measured by high-performance liquid chromatography and retinol-binding protein (RBP) by nephelometry. In the 11 matched CDH-control newborns, plasma retinol and RBP levels in CDH newborns were 50% less than control values (P< 0.0002 and <0.006, respectively); in contrast, retinol levels in CDH mothers were significantly higher than those of control mothers (P < 0.005). The observation that the plasma concentrations of retinol and RBP are low in infants with CDH relative to controls may be clinically very relevant and may help to elucidate the mechanism of development of this congenital anomaly.
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PMID:Retinol status of newborn infants with congenital diaphragmatic hernia. 979 71

METHODS: Evaluated are surgical difficulties, management problems and weight loss in patients with distal gastric bypass as a revisionary procedure. Eighty patients were followed up to 3 years; four were lost to follow-up. Mean age was 43; mean prebariatric surgery weight 134 kg; height 1.65 meters; body mass index 40.1; ideal body weight 62.7 kg; excess weight 70.5 kg; per cent excess weight 214%. A 250 cm stomach-to-ileocecal valve segment of small bowel was used, and the biliopancreatic secretions were brought into the terminal ileum 100 6 in from the ileocecal valve. Mean pouch size was 63 cc; length of hospital stay 5 days; operative blood loss 616 cc; operative time 130 min. RESULTS: Intraoperative complications included three splenic injuries (without splenectomy). Early complications included one deep vein thrombosis, two marginal ulcers, one GI hemorrhage, one wound dehiscence, one pouch outlet obstruction and one pancreatitis. Late complications included: one death from protein malnutrition/ ARDS; 21 hypoproteinemia; six protein malnutrition, and of these, three had hyperalimentation; three cholecystitis; 27 anemia; 22 incisional hernia; two staple-line disruption (reoperated); 26 low serum iron; 11 prolonged (>6 months) diarrhea; three prolonged frequent vomiting; and two unrelated deaths (chronic myelogenous leukemia and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis). Mean excess weight loss was 83% at 12 months; 89% at 24 months; and 94% at 36 months. CONCLUSION: The distal gastric bypass is fraught with the operative and immediate post-operative complications experienced in any revisionary bariatric surgery. Distal gastric bypass is very effective in producing long-term weight loss. Nutritional problems are common but usually easily corrected. The most serious nutritional complication is protein malnutrition, which must be identified and corrected early. Success of this procedure is dependent upon patient compliance with proper nutrition and supplements, and regular office follow-up with monitoring of laboratory data. Patients who are noncompliant are at significant risk for complications.
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PMID:The Gastric Bypass for Failed Bariatric Surgical Procedures. 1072 55

Complications involving the abdominal wall, particularly incisional hernias, were not expected when laparoscopic procedures were first introduced. With the increasing number of laparoscopies in abdominal surgery, more incisional hernias are observed. The authors report 13 cases of umbilical incisional hernia, which occurred late after laparoscopic cholecystectomy, and one case of omental procidentia through a lateral port, which occurred early after laparoscopic hernia repair with the transabdominal preperitoneal technique. There are 4 men and 10 women (mean age, 59.8 years; range, 40-74 years). Between March 1991 and December 1997, a total of 1,287 patients underwent laparoscopic operations at the Surgical Department of the Gradenigo Hospital in Turin, Italy. Incisional hernia incidence is 1%. Risk factors, such as chronic bronchitis or weight increase, which give rise to endoabdominal pressure, are present in some cases. Malnutrition may have a major role in many cases. Calculi larger than 15 mm are also seen frequently. Postlaparoscopy incisional hernia is generally a minor complication--only once did its occurrence cause a strangulated hernia. All precautions, including fascial suturing, must be taken to reduce the 1% incidence of postoperative incisional hernias.
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PMID:Incisional hernia and fascial defect following laparoscopic surgery. 1087 24

Complications involving the abdominal wall, particularly incisional hernias, were not expected when laparoscopic procedures were first introduced. With the increasing number of laparoscopies in abdominal surgery, more incisional hernias are observed. The authors report 13 cases of umbilical incisional hernia, which occurred late after laparoscopic cholecystectomy, and one case of omental procidentia through a lateral port, which occurred early after laparoscopic hernia repair with the transabdominal preperitoneal technique. There are 4 men and 10 women (mean age, 59.8 years; range, 40-74 years). Between March 1991 and December 1997, a total of 1,287 patients underwent laparoscopic operations at the Surgical Department of the Gradenigo Hospital in Turin, Italy. Incisional hernia incidence is 1%. Risk factors, such as chronic bronchitis or weight increase, which give rise to endoabdominal pressure, are present in some cases. Malnutrition may have a major role in many cases. Calculi larger than 15 mm are also seen frequently. Postlaparoscopy incisional hernia is generally a minor complication--only once did its occurrence cause a strangulated hernia. All precautions, including fascial suturing, must be taken to reduce the 1% incidence of postoperative incisional hernias.
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PMID:Incisional hernia and fascial defect following laparoscopic surgery. 1080 97

The inguinal hernia, malformations caused by persistence of peritonea-vaginal duct, is frequent in children. It is a benign affection as long as it is not strangled. During our five-year-retrospective study, we have found 32 cases (30 boys and 2 girls) of strangled inguinal hernia. There are 78,12% of cases under five years old. In 54%, the hernia was on the right side. Malnutrition and inguinoscrotal hernia are very exposed to strangulation. We observed obstruction syndrome in 81,25% of cases. We have to deplore one case of scrotal fistulae by intestinal necrosis and two cases of testicle necrosis. For all of our patients, the peritonea-vaginal duct was closed with ligature, associated with pre-funicular parietal refection. One case of recurrence is found in postoperative time.
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PMID:[Children's strangulated inguinal hernia]. 1573 40


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