Ninety-two consecutive infants aged up to 12 months underwent primary inguinal herniotomy over a 5-year period. All were treated in a district hospital paediatric surgical unit according to recommendations of the British Association of Paediatric Surgeons. After a mean follow-up of 45.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOver a 2-year period we have successfully inserted 70 subclavian catheters in 68 patients from 76 attempts by cephalic vein cutdown. There were no complications of catheter insertion although 40% were inserted by junior surgeons (mean survival of catheters was 16.5 days) and in 30% of patients the catheter was removed before the completion of treatment for both infective and other complications.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFForty boys with 54 incompletely descended testes took part in a double blind, controlled trial of intranasal luteinising hormone releasing hormone. In the control (placebo) group of 18 boys there was no significant change in testicular descent and all required orchidopexy; in the 22 treated boys, however, 12 of 29 testes (42%) were found in a lower position. This study supports the idea that a trial of intranasal luteinising hormone releasing hormone (1200 micrograms/day for 28 days) will help clarify the need for orchidopexy in at least 30% of boys with incomplete descent of the testis, particularly those in whom the testes have emerged from the inguinal canal.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe assessment of malnutrition by simple methods was studied in 120 patients undergoing elective major abdominal surgery to determine which index was of the most value in predicting postoperative complications. Weight for height and weight loss were of little significant value; serum albumin less than 35 g/l was more significant (p less than 0.05) but predicted only a quarter of those patients who developed serious complications.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRadiological assessment of arm fat and muscle stores was performed in 46 controls and 10 malnourished patients. Values for arm fat and muscle thickness were obtained. In malnourished patients there was no significant correlation between fat estimation from the radiograph and measurement with skinfold calipers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPrediction of serious postoperative complications by using standard anthropometric and biochemical nutritional variables was attempted in 225 patients admitted for major abdominal surgery. In 102 of the patients hand-grip dynamometry was also measured, and this proved the most sensitive test, predicting complications in 48 of the 55 patients (87%) who developed them (p < 0.001).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTwo patients with anorexia nervosa were treated on a general surgical unit for acute gastric dilatation. In both cases the dilatation rapidly followed an increase in the usual low dietary intake of the patients, and the ingestion of extra food may have initiated the acute episode. Conservative treatment with parenteral fluids, nasogastric intubation, and then a gradual return to a normal diet proved a satisfactory method of management.
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