Results 341 to 350 of about 5,111,327 (413)
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Sandblasting injury of the hand

Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, 1982
Sandblasting equipment may produce serious hand injuries even though emission pressures are relatively low in comparison to forces generated by airless sprayers. This report describes a permanent injury caused by the injection of sandblast dust into the hand.
Michael F Nolan   +2 more
openaire   +4 more sources

Hand injuries

Current Problems in Surgery, 1993
A systematic approach to the injured hand has been presented that ensures no injuries are overlooked and provides the basis for a reconstructive approach. This scheme is tissue oriented, first evaluating injury to the vasculature, then to the skin, bone, joint, nerve, and tendon units.
openaire   +2 more sources

Anesthesia for Hand Injuries

Emergency Medicine Clinics of North America, 1985
Hand injuries account for an increasing incidence of emergency room visits, both for purposes of diagnosis and treatment. Patients are also expressing a growing reluctance toward hospitalization for procedures that are now performed with precision in the office or same day surgical unit.
Alamgir Isani, Charles P. Melone
openaire   +3 more sources

Acute hand injuries in athletes

Physician and sportsmedicine, 2017
Hand and wrist injuries in athletes are common, representing between 3 and 25% of all sports injuries. As many as a quarter of all sports injuries involve the hand or wrist.
Yoseph A. Rosenbaum, Hisham M. Awan
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Treatment of HAND INJURIES

AJN, American Journal of Nursing, 1963
T HE SMALLEST LACERATION or puncture wound of the hand may lead to prolonged or permanent disability. A half-inch laceration appearing as a minor injury may, in the right place, sever the median nerve or ulnar nerve or divide a flexor or an extensor tendon. A minor wound of the fingertip, when treated improperly, can become infected and eventually lead
openaire   +3 more sources

Mutilated Hand Injuries

Clinics in Plastic Surgery, 2011
The authors provide a review of treatment of the mutilated hand, discussing the effect of injury on soft tissue loss, intrinsic and extrinsic musculature, paravascular structures, tendons, and the bony skeleton. The authors review functional loss and restoration.
Theresa Hegge, Michael W. Neumeister
openaire   +3 more sources

Hand injuries at leisure

The Journal of Hand Surgery: British & European Volume, 1985
In a survey of 383 moderate and severe hand injuries in adults, 246 (64.4%) occurred outwith work. Falling (sixty-four patients) and punching (forty-eight patients) were the commonest mechanisms of blunt injury. Glass (eight), knives (seven) and “do-it-yourself” materials (eight) were most frequently implicated in sharp trauma.
openaire   +3 more sources

Frostbite Injuries of the Hand

Clinics in Plastic Surgery, 1989
Injury from frostbite has had a profound effect on developing civilizations and continues to affect modern day humans. Rational therapy and future research for frostbite must be based on a comprehensive understanding of the physiology of tissue freezing and healing.
J E Vogel, Dellon Al
openaire   +2 more sources

Management of Hand Injuries: Part II

Advanced Emergency Nursing Journal, 2016
Hand injuries are a frequent emergency department occurrence and account for most upper extremity injuries. Proper assessment and management of hand injuries can reduce morbidity and prevent long-term disability.
E. Ramirez, K. Hoyt
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Hand injuries in children

Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, 1976
The differences in management, of hand injuries in children and adults are highlighted. Topics covered include skin and subcutaneous tissues, finger nail and finger nail matrix injuries, amputations, tendon injuries, and nerve injuries.
openaire   +4 more sources

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