Results 271 to 280 of about 575,046 (318)
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Journal of Trauma, 2011
UNLABELLED The optimal management of stable patients with anterior abdominal stab wounds (AASWs) remains a matter of debate. A recent Western Trauma Association (WTA) multicenter trial found that exclusion of peritoneal penetration by local wound ...
W. Biffl+7 more
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UNLABELLED The optimal management of stable patients with anterior abdominal stab wounds (AASWs) remains a matter of debate. A recent Western Trauma Association (WTA) multicenter trial found that exclusion of peritoneal penetration by local wound ...
W. Biffl+7 more
semanticscholar +1 more source
Sinography of abdominal stab wounds
The American Journal of Surgery, 1969Abstract 1. 1. Sinograms have been performed on thirty patients after stab wounds of the abdomen. In eighteen patients no radiographic evidence of peritoneal penetration was found. Fourteen of these patients avoided having an otherwise needless operation. In four, however, clinical judgment dictated laparotomy, which proved to be unnecessary. 2.
C. Trimble, M. Pomerantz, Ben Eiseman
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Posterior Abdominal Stab Wounds
The Journal of Trauma: Injury, Infection, and Critical Care, 1981Selective management of 465 patients with stab wounds limited to the posterior abdomen is reviewed. Celiotomy was based primarily on clinical findings. Tenderness not localized to the area of injury and absent or rare bowel sounds best identified patients with serious injuries. Peritoneal lavage and local wound exploration were used infrequently.
Thomas V. Berne, James J. Peck
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A 20-year-old male is brought in by paramedics after suffering two stab wounds to his chest. In the emergency department (ED), the patient is awake but combative. He responds to questions by stating his name but is flailing his arms and shouting to everyone to leave him alone. His breath smells of alcohol. On physical examination, his blood pressure is
Omid Yousefian+3 more
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STAB WOUND OF ORBIT AND ANTRUM
Archives of Otolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery, 1948PENETRATING wounds of the orbits and sinuses were common during the war. In civilian life, however, they are infrequent. A case observed by me was sufficiently interesting to merit being reported. A woman about 35 years of age walked into the admitting room of Michael Reese Hospital during the night of April 20, 1947, stating that she had been stabbed
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ORBITAL AND TRANSORBITAL STAB WOUNDS
Archives of Ophthalmology, 1954IT IS NOT rare for orbital stab wounds to become fatal if no specific intervention is made. This is due to the common occurrence of additional, transorbital complications. Nevertheless, no particular attention has been paid to this type of lesion; in the ophthalmological and neurosurgical literature the contributions to the discussion of the subject ...
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BMJ, 2009
Doctors should already be telling the police whenever a person arrives at hospital with a wound inflicted in a violent attack with a knife, blade, or other sharp instrument.1 This duty was contained in interim joint guidance from the General Medical Council and the Department of Health in August 2008. The police should not …
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Doctors should already be telling the police whenever a person arrives at hospital with a wound inflicted in a violent attack with a knife, blade, or other sharp instrument.1 This duty was contained in interim joint guidance from the General Medical Council and the Department of Health in August 2008. The police should not …
openaire +3 more sources
European Journal of Trauma and Emergency Surgery, 2017
Hüseyin Uzunosmanoğlu+6 more
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Hüseyin Uzunosmanoğlu+6 more
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Morphometric analysis of stab wounds by MSCT and MRI after the instillation of contrast medium
La radiologia medica, 2016P. Fais+8 more
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