Results 221 to 230 of about 12,849 (248)
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Gastroschisis update

Journal of Pediatric Surgery, 1980
Sixty-four infants with gastroschisis have been managed in the 9-yr period, 1970-1979, with four postoperative deaths. The silo technique has been the standard method of management in this series, permitting initial expansion of the abdominal cavity without increased abdominal pressure and respiratory embarassment.
D R, King, R, Savrin, E T, Boles
openaire   +2 more sources

Gastroschisis: an update

Pediatric Surgery International, 2010
Gastroschisis (GS) continues to increase in frequency, with several studies now reported an incidence of between 4 and 5 per 10,000 live births. The main risk factor would seem to be young maternal age, and it is in this group that the greatest increase has occurred.
Andrew J A, Holland   +2 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Gastroschisis: No myth

Journal of Pediatric Surgery, 1978
The question has been raised whether omphalocele and gastroschisis are fundamentally different pathologic entities, or whether they are only different manifestations of the same underlying cause. After studying the family history of 37 patients with omphalocele and 14 patients with gastroschisis, it seems probable that hereditary factors contribute to ...
J A, Noordijk, F, Bloemsma-Jonkman
openaire   +2 more sources

THE MANAGEMENT OF GASTROSCHISIS

Australian and New Zealand Journal of Surgery, 1979
A review of gastroschisis treated at the Royal Alexandra Hospital for Children, Sydney, in the ten years between 1967 and 1976, was carried out. Early postoperative deaths occurred in those with poor general condition before and immediately after the operation.
S T, Ho, I S, Reid
openaire   +2 more sources

Gastroschisis and Omphalocele

Surgical Clinics of North America, 2006
The newborn who has an abdominal wall defect is one of the most dramatic presentations in medicine and offers many challenging problems to the pediatric surgeon. This article presents the basics of the two most common abdominal wall defectsdgastroschisis and omphaloceledincluding principles and options of prenatal, postnatal, and surgical management ...
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Management of gastroschisis

Current Opinion in Pediatrics, 2016
The diagnosis and treatment of gastroschisis spans the perinatal disciplines of maternal fetal medicine, neonatology, and pediatric surgery. Since gastroschisis is one of the commonest and costliest structural birth defects treated in neonatal ICUs, a comprehensive review of its epidemiology, prenatal diagnosis, postnatal treatment, and short and long ...
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Gastroschisis

A.M.A. Archives of Surgery, 1957
As one surveys the literature on the subject of gastroschisis, one is impressed by the confusion of thought which is occasioned by this term. There are those who use it to embrace all forms of anterior abdominal-wall maldevelopment and herniation.1There are others who use it to describe what Gross and Blodgett2have termed omphalocele.
openaire   +2 more sources

Gastroschisis

The American Journal of Surgery, 1972
C W, Miller, J, Crumpler, G S, Campbell
openaire   +4 more sources

The pathogenesis of gastroschisis

Birth Defects Research, 2022
Marcia L. Feldkamp, John C. Carey
openaire   +2 more sources

Omphalocoele and gastroschisis

1982
Medical literature has often been vague in characterizing omphalocoele and gastroschisis, while the nomenclature has been inconsistent. Both words have been used indiscriminately, as well as others such as exomphalos, to describe what is now commonly understood to be omphalocoele.
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