Results 141 to 150 of about 9,921 (183)
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New England Journal of Medicine, 1947
AT LEAST fifty surgical procedures have been employed in the cure of chronic peptic ulcer since Doyen1 first suggested gastroenterostomy, nearly all of which have been based on arrest or neutralization of acid secretion. The operation of the hour is vagotomy, which owes its popularity to the imperfections of its immediate predecessor, subtotal ...
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AT LEAST fifty surgical procedures have been employed in the cure of chronic peptic ulcer since Doyen1 first suggested gastroenterostomy, nearly all of which have been based on arrest or neutralization of acid secretion. The operation of the hour is vagotomy, which owes its popularity to the imperfections of its immediate predecessor, subtotal ...
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The American Journal of Surgery, 1963
Abstract 1. 1. A survey has been presented of complications attributable to total abdominal vagotomy. 2. 2. General postoperative complications and sequellae peculiar to gastric resection or drainage alone have not been included. 3. 3. Early postoperative morbidity attributable to vagotomy is largely due to injury of adjacent structures ...
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Abstract 1. 1. A survey has been presented of complications attributable to total abdominal vagotomy. 2. 2. General postoperative complications and sequellae peculiar to gastric resection or drainage alone have not been included. 3. 3. Early postoperative morbidity attributable to vagotomy is largely due to injury of adjacent structures ...
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The American Journal of Surgery, 1987
The anatomic characteristics of the vagus nerve were described by Galen in the second century AD, and its physiology was studied by Pavlov almost a century ago. Therapeutic possibilities of vagal denervation of the stomach was explored by several surgeons in the first quarter of this century. The most auspicious effort was that of Latarjet. The rebirth
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The anatomic characteristics of the vagus nerve were described by Galen in the second century AD, and its physiology was studied by Pavlov almost a century ago. Therapeutic possibilities of vagal denervation of the stomach was explored by several surgeons in the first quarter of this century. The most auspicious effort was that of Latarjet. The rebirth
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Postgraduate Medicine, 1970
The possibility of a link between vagotomy and gallstones was explored in a personal series. The number of patients found to have gallstones 1 to 10 years after vagotomy was about what one would expect in any group of persons of this age. A prospective rather than a retrospective study would be a better test.
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The possibility of a link between vagotomy and gallstones was explored in a personal series. The number of patients found to have gallstones 1 to 10 years after vagotomy was about what one would expect in any group of persons of this age. A prospective rather than a retrospective study would be a better test.
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Gastric Vagotomy vs. Total Abdominal Vagotomy
Archives of Surgery, 1960Introduction Conventional techniques of vagotomy represent a total abdominal vagotomy that disrupts the entire parasympathetic innervation to all abdominal viscera supplied by the vagus nerves—i.e., the stomach, small intestine, proximal colon, liver, biliary tract, and pancreas.
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The Lancet, 1970
Post-vagotomy dysphagia can be defined as a partial or complete obstruction to the passage of solid food and sometimes of liquid from esophagus to stomach, developing after the vagus nerve has been sectioned in the region of the esophagogastric junction.
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Post-vagotomy dysphagia can be defined as a partial or complete obstruction to the passage of solid food and sometimes of liquid from esophagus to stomach, developing after the vagus nerve has been sectioned in the region of the esophagogastric junction.
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Vagotomie und Vagotomiekontrolle ?Ergebnisse einer Umfrage
Langenbecks Archiv f�r Chirurgie, 1986A survey of 1006 surgical clinics in the Federal Republic of Germany in 1984 showed that the general surgical procedure for duodenal ulcers was vagotomy in 65.9%. 21.9% of the clinics checked the effectiveness of vagotomy intraoperatively by either performing electrostimulation (69.6%), leucomethylene-blue staining (20.9%), monitoring of the ...
H. Pichlmaier, Th. Junginger
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Cardiospasm following vagotomy
The American Journal of Surgery, 1950Abstract Considering the dual innervation of the lower esophagus and cardiac end of the stomach, cardiospasm or achalasia might be expected to be a frequent complication of vagotomy. A review of the recent literature dealing with vagotomy indicates that this complication is seldom seen or reported.
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