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Vagotomy

Scandinavian Journal of Gastroenterology, 1996
Peptic ulcer disease was for years a common indication for surgery in Danish hospitals and considerable experience in partial gastrectomy was gained. In spite of an unquestionable mortality rate and a number of patients having postgastrectomy complaints, results were generally recognized as acceptable. Danish surgeons were for long reluctant to take up
E, Amdrup, C P, Hovendal, H E, Jensen
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A STUDY OF VAGOTOMY

Archives of Surgery, 1950
SINCE the report by Dragstedt1of 2 patients on whom he performed transthoracic section of the vagus nerves for duodenal ulcer, much interest and investigation have centered on the role of the vagus nerves in gastrointestinal physiology and on their relation to peptic ulcer.
John M. Beal, Peter Dineen
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Critique on Vagotomy

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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Complications of vagotomy

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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