Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0019270 (hernia)
15,856 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In the last decade of the past century, as laparoscopy was introduced in our clinic in 1993, minimal access therapy (MAT--endoscopy, angiography, interventional imagery) had a positive and constant evolution. Our paper retrospectively evaluates the interventions performed between 2003-2005 (group A) compared to those performed between 1993-1995 (group B). We observed a 17.08% (7056 vs 6026 interventions/year) raise in the total number of interventions in group A, with a significant 66% decrease (195 vs. 588 interventions/year) of interventions for gastro-duodenal ulcer and a 18% decrease (1211 vs 1490 interventions/year) of appendectomies, but a 63% increase (1560 vs. 955 interventions/year) of cholecystectomies, 53% increase (1186 vs. 773 interventions/year) of interventions for parietal defects and a 62% (626 vs. 325 interventions/year) increase of oncological interventions. The most frequent interventions were, in the order of frequencies: cholecystectomies (79.8% laparoscopically), appendectomies, interventions for hernia and eventrations, oncological operations and trauma surgery. The incidence of laparoscopic interventions was greater in group A, counting for 19% of the total number of interventions. In group A were performed 2334 endoscopies, 149 diagnostic and therapeutic angiographies. Postoperative mortality dropped with 29.64% and hospital stay dropped to 4.7 days. We believe that the incidence of MAT should rise, by performing more laparoscopic interventions and this change should lead to a revision of the surgical residents training program.
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PMID:[Progress of surgical treatment in the last 10 years. Comparative study of surgical interventions performed between 1993-1995 versus between 2003-2005]. 1741 Jul 30