Results 201 to 210 of about 29,720 (235)
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Chest-Wall Reconstruction for Spondylocostal Dysostosis
Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, 1993A child with respiratory insufficiency due to a lethal syndrome known as spondylocostal dysostosis is described. Severe chest-wall deformities with resultant paradoxical chest-wall motion were successfully corrected by surgical reconstruction of the right thorax.
L S, Nichter +3 more
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Prosthetic Reconstruction of the Chest Wall
Thoracic Surgery Clinics, 2010Chest wall reconstructions can be complex and challenging procedures, especially when huge thoracic defects have been generated by radical excisions. Nonrigid reconstructions with meshes or patches have the goal of avoiding a lung hernia caused by the chest wall defect, or preventing the impaction of the scapula in case of posterior chest wall ...
Pascal A, Thomas, Laurent, Brouchet
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Reconstruction of Congenital Chest-Wall Deformities
Surgical Clinics of North America, 1989Pectus deformities and Poland's syndrome are two relatively common congenital deformities of the chest wall that are amenable to reconstruction. The extent of the structural deformity in pectus deformity and the degree of associated cardiopulmonary dysfunction are critical variables in preoperative assessment.
V F, Garcia, A E, Seyfer, G M, Graeber
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Chest wall reconstruction after resection of primary malignant chest wall tumours
European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery, 1990In order to review the development of chest wall reconstruction, 37 cases of primary malignant skeletal chest wall tumours treated since 1958 were studied. These included chondrosarcomas (20), Ewing's tumours (7) and solitary plasmacytomas (10). Skeletal reconstruction was performed in 24 patients. Before 1972, Marlex mesh alone was used. Since then, a
J, Eng, S, Sabanathan, A J, Mearns
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Chest Wall Reconstruction— Management of the Difficult Chest Wound
Annals of Plastic Surgery, 1982Full-thickness chest wall defects after ablative surgery for metastatic cancer, trauma, infection, or irradiation injury have posed major and often impossible dilemmas for reconstruction. At times, resection has had to be abandoned because reconstruction was deemed infeasible.
M, Scheflan, J, Bostwick, F, Nahai
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Chest Wall Reconstruction in Pediatric Patients with Chest Wall Tumors: A Systematic Review
Journal of Pediatric Surgery, 2023Christina M Theodorou
exaly
[Chest wall reconstruction after resection of chest wall tumors].
Kyobu geka. The Japanese journal of thoracic surgery, 2015Between 1994 and 2012, chest wall resection and reconstruction were performed 15 patients (16 cases) with primary chest wall tumors, metastatic tumors. and chest wall recurrence of breast carcinoma. In all the patients, reconstruction of the chest wall was performed using layers of polypropylene Marlex mesh sheets.
Katsuo, Yoshiya +4 more
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[Chest wall reconstruction after resection of malignant chest wall tumors].
Nihon Geka Gakkai zasshi, 1998Full-thickness chest wall resection is performed for complete removal of primary and secondary malignant chest wall tumors. Large defects of the chest wall after resection must be repaired to maintain adequate ventilation, to protect important intrathoracic structures, and to preserve cosmetic integrity.
H, Ayabe +4 more
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