Purpose: Risk of complications following hernia repair is the key parameter to assess risk/benefit ratio of a technique. As mesh devices are permanent, their risks are life-long. Too many reports in the past assessed mesh safety prematurely after short follow-ups.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: The ubiquitous use of polypropylene mesh in hernia surgery has spawned a new clinical syndrome: chronic post-herniorrhaphy neuralgia. A subset of that clinical picture is dysejaculation, sexual pain, and orchialgia. We propose to identify the processes that lead to that pain.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: The objective is to compare nerve densities in explanted polypropylene meshes in patients with or without chronic pain. Pain has supplanted recurrences as a complication of hernia surgery. The increased incidence of pain mirrors a parallel increase in the use of polypropylene meshes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA 64-year-old woman presented with atypical abdominal pain, weight loss, melena and hematemesis. Reactivation of a peptic ulcer was diagnosed and she was treated with antacids and cimetidine. When her symptoms recurred 4 months later, a perforated duodenal ulcer was noted on roentgenograms.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe have reviewed our experience with 11 patients treated with LeVeen peritoneovenous shunts during a 22-month period from March, 1976, through December, 1977, to assess long-term results and shunt patency. Nine patients had follow-up studies to assess shunt patency at a mean of 26 months. After insertion of the shunt, the mean weight loss was 7.
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