Results 311 to 320 of about 744,571 (335)
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Penetrating wounds of the abdomen
The American Journal of Surgery, 1949Abstract A summary of twenty-two cases of perforating wounds of the abdomen is presented. The mortality was 31.2 per cent. Factors which appear to affect the mortality rate in this series are the time interval between injury and surgery and the number of abdominal organs damaged.
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Early complications following penetrating wounds of the brain.
Journal of Neurosurgery, 1971The experience of an evacuation hospital in Japan in treating 506 consecutive patients from Vietnam with penetrating wounds of the brain is reported with particular reference to early complications.
Ralph E. Hagan
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Analysis of 2187 consecutive penetrating wounds of the brain from Vietnam.
Journal of Neurosurgery, 1971A series of 2187 cases of penetrating wounds of the brain, treated in a U.S. Army Hospital in Vietnam, is analyzed according to operability, wounding agents, sites of cranial penetration, associated organ system injuries, operative and postoperative ...
W. Hammon
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Factors affecting prognosis with penetrating wounds of the heart.
Journal of Trauma, 1999OBJECTIVE To determine factors affecting prognosis for patients with penetrating wounds of the heart. METHODS A retrospective review of 302 patients with penetrating heart wounds undergoing emergency thoracotomy (August of 1980 through June of 1997) in
J. Tyburski+4 more
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Penetrating wounds of the gravid uterus
American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, 1954Abstract Twenty-three cases of penetrating wounds of the gravid uterus have been summarized and analyzed. An additional case from our records has been described. The evidence gained from these cases favors conservative surgery as the treatment of choice.
A. C. Posner+2 more
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, 1992
Angiography is always necessary in patients with penetrating stab wounds to the head, to exclude unexpected vascular lesions. The most important, since they are seldom clinically evident, are traumatic aneurysms and arteriovenous fistulae.
M. D. Trevou, J. Dellen
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Angiography is always necessary in patients with penetrating stab wounds to the head, to exclude unexpected vascular lesions. The most important, since they are seldom clinically evident, are traumatic aneurysms and arteriovenous fistulae.
M. D. Trevou, J. Dellen
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Pericardial tamponade: a critical determinant for survival following penetrating cardiac wounds.
Journal of Trauma, 1986Previous studies have emphasized injury mechanism, wound site, and presenting vital signs as critical determinants for survival following penetrating cardiac injury. Our experience suggests pericardial tamponade is another crucial factor and is the basis
C. Moreno+3 more
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Penetrating Bihemispheric Traumatic Brain Injury: A Collective Review of Gunshot Wounds to the Head.
World Neurosurgery, 2017L. Turco, D. Cornell, B. Phillips
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Mandatory laparotomy for gunshot wounds penetrating the abdomen.
American Journal of Surgery, 1980E. Moore+3 more
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