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Percutaneous “Stepped” Drainage Technique for Infected Pancreatic Necrosis
Surgical Laparoscopy, Endoscopy & Percutaneous Techniques, 2009Aggressive surgical pancreatic debridement remains the standard of care, may require multiple abdominal explorations and is associated with high mortality. We have introduced the stepped technique of percutaneous treatment of infected peripancreatic fluid collections.We performed a retrospective review of patients with severe infected necrotizing ...
Miklosh, Bala +4 more
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Management of Infected Pancreatic Necrosis
2004Pancreatic necrosis occurs in 10–20% of patients presenting with acute pancreatitis.1 Attitudes to the surgical approach to this have changed greatly in the last decade, and the role of surgical drainage is gradually evolving. Of those patients that die following an attack of severe acute pancreatitis, over half will succumb to overwhelming early organ
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Open Packing in Infected Pancreatic Necrosis
Digestive Surgery, 1997The technique of open packing for patients with infected pancreatic necrosis has undergone considerable evolution since 1976 when we first used planned reoperation for this condition.
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PANCREATIC MARSUPIALIZATION FOR INFECTED PANCREATIC NECROSIS
Southern Medical Journal, 1990J. T. Chun +3 more
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Endoscopic evaluation of infected pancreatic necrosis.
Surgical laparoscopy & endoscopy, 1994The most severe form of acute pancreatitis is characterized by necrosis of the pancreatic parenchyma and/or peripancreatic tissue. Secondary infection of this necrotic tissue carries a high mortality because there is little limitation to the spread of this infection in the retroperitoneum.
R A, Prinz, R, Olen
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Surgical Treatment of Infected Pancreatic Necrosis
1999Acute pancreatitis is an inflammatory process of variable severity, ranging from a mild, self-limited form with interstitial oedema of the pancreas to a severe form with extensive pancreatic necrosis and haemorrhage (1-3). Pancreatic necrosis combined with sepsis and organ failure is the leading cause of death in acute pancreatitis. Although aggressive
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Open Packing for Infected Pancreatic Necrosis
1993Due to truly remarkable improvements in critical care medicine, early deaths from severe acute pancreatitis have become decidedly rare. Today, the majority of deaths from acute pancreatitis occur late in the course of the disease and are overwhelmingly dur to secondary bacterial infection of damaged pancreatic tissues [1, 2].
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Multidisciplinary standards of care and recent progress in pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma
Ca-A Cancer Journal for Clinicians, 2020Aaron J Grossberg +2 more
exaly

