Background: Often missed in blunt chest wall injury, costal cartilage injuries can cause chest wall instability, refractory pain, and deformity. Notably, there is only a small amount of evidence regarding hardware performance when applied to costal cartilage. In a prior multicenter study, hardware failure rate was found to be approximately 3% following surgical stabilization of rib fractures (SSRFs) for all fracture locations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntestinal malrotation is characterised by positional and congenital fixation abnormalities resulting from a failure in embryonic development in the normal 270° rotation around the axis of the superior mesenteric artery. Intestinal malrotation is primarily thought to affect neonates with an incidence of 1 in 500, however, only 1 in 6000 live births are symptomatic, and these usually present within the first month of life in 40% of cases and within the first year in over 5% of cases as an obstructive pathology or volvulus. In adults, however, the incidence has been documented at 0.
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