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Penetrating neck wounds

The American Journal of Surgery, 1983
Over a 15 year period 120 patients with neck injuries that penetrated the platysma were studied. Appropriate treatment was initiated in the emergency room. Sixty-one patients underwent exploration and 59 were observed. Two of the observed patients later required delayed operation. In 9.2 percent of the patients, two or more injuries were present within
E, Massac, S M, Siram, L D, Leffall
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Penetrating neck wounds

The American Journal of Surgery, 1980
Abstract A review of 68 cases of penetrating neck wounds from our institution as well as a review of the recent literature dealing with the management of such injuries is presented. The wounding agent was gunshot (38 cases), knife (21), broken glass (3), an ice pick (1) and miscellaneous (5).
W H, Stroud, D R, Yarbrough
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Penetrating wounds of the neck

The American Journal of Surgery, 1956
An analysis and review of 100 penetrating wounds of the neck in a single civilian hospital has been presented. The mortality in the series was 11 per cent, or approximately the same incidence of death reported for neck wounds from all of the great wars beginning with the Civil War.
M J, FOGELMAN, R D, STEWART
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Penetrating Abdominal Wounds

JAMA, 1985
ESCALATION of civilian violence in our nation ( Time , March 23, 1981, pp 16-21) continues to make physical trauma the leading cause of death in persons up to 38 years of age. 2 Life-threatening penetrating wounds to our President, the Pope, and countless innocent citizens provide the rationale to discuss the management of such injuries in a journal ...
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PENETRATING WOUNDS OF THE ABDOMEN.

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1905
Penetrating wounds of the abdomen occur with considerable frequency in civil as well as in military practice, and until recently have been the most uniformly fatal of all injuries. As much of our knowledge of this class of injuries has been derived from the experience of the civil war, in preantiseptic times, so we may expect to revise or to confirm ...
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[Penetrating abdominal wounds].

Minerva chirurgica, 1980
37 cases of penetrating abdominal wounds, 10 stab wounds and 27 gunshot wounds, have been examined. They are part of a total of 1856 emergency surgery operations carried out consecutively over a period of 30 months; they therefore represent 2%. The series consisted of 31 men and 6 women; average age was 31.
G, Meo, B, Aghemo, A, Bonini
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Penetrating Wounds of the Esophagus

The Annals of Thoracic Surgery, 1972
Abstract The histories of 22 patients with perforation of the esophagus from bullet or stab wounds who were treated at Grady Memorial Hospital between August, 1964, and July, 1971, were reviewed. The presenting symptoms, signs, and plain roentgenographic findings in this group of patients, because of the frequent existence of injuries to other organs,
P N, Symbas   +3 more
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