Results 131 to 140 of about 18,407 (143)
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Journal of Pediatric Surgery, 1983
This is a report of a personal series of 10 children seen with femoral hernias over a 15-yr-period. Femoral hernia in this age group is rare and a correct preoperative diagnosis is often overlooked. In nine of the 10 patients the preoperative diagnosis was correct.
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This is a report of a personal series of 10 children seen with femoral hernias over a 15-yr-period. Femoral hernia in this age group is rare and a correct preoperative diagnosis is often overlooked. In nine of the 10 patients the preoperative diagnosis was correct.
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The American Journal of Surgery, 1971
Abstract Of 1,101 consecutive primary femoral hernia repairs performed at Shouldice Hospital, Toronto, during the twenty-five year period between January 1, 1945 and January 1, 1970, 687 were performed in men and 414 in women. There were 362 instances of ipsilateral primary inguinal hernia in men and only 48 in women, so that 325 primary femoral ...
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Abstract Of 1,101 consecutive primary femoral hernia repairs performed at Shouldice Hospital, Toronto, during the twenty-five year period between January 1, 1945 and January 1, 1970, 687 were performed in men and 414 in women. There were 362 instances of ipsilateral primary inguinal hernia in men and only 48 in women, so that 325 primary femoral ...
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Surgical Clinics of North America, 2003
Femoral hernia repair has a long history. In the nineteenth century, simple closure of the femoral orifice by the femoral approach was favored. Such renowned surgeons as Bassini, Marcy, and Cushing authored papers about the femoral approach to femoral hernia. The recurrence rate was so high, however, that it was replaced by the inguinal approach.
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Femoral hernia repair has a long history. In the nineteenth century, simple closure of the femoral orifice by the femoral approach was favored. Such renowned surgeons as Bassini, Marcy, and Cushing authored papers about the femoral approach to femoral hernia. The recurrence rate was so high, however, that it was replaced by the inguinal approach.
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Annals of Surgery, 1948
WHEN an irreducible hernia is present in the groin, the chances are even that it is a femoral hernia. Femoral hernias, despite their rarity, commonly represent surgical emergencies, whereas strangulation occurs in only 1 per cent of inguinal hernias. It is not unusual for a femoral hernia to make its first appearance in the form of strangulation.
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WHEN an irreducible hernia is present in the groin, the chances are even that it is a femoral hernia. Femoral hernias, despite their rarity, commonly represent surgical emergencies, whereas strangulation occurs in only 1 per cent of inguinal hernias. It is not unusual for a femoral hernia to make its first appearance in the form of strangulation.
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