Publications by authors named "M Heinerman"

This report describes a guidewire fracture during an attempt at endoscopic treatment of pancreatic duct calculi in a patient with chronic pancreatitis, multiple pancreatic duct stenoses and pancreatic duct stones. This patient underwent endoscopic sphincterotomy in order to perform pancreatic duct drainage prior to ESWL. After sphincterotomy, a guidewire was introduced into the main pancreatic duct, but was jammed by the calculi.

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Two hundred and twenty patients with a total of 412 gall bladder stones of between 8 and 38 mm in size were treated with extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy, using the overhead module Lithostrar Plus. Fifty six per cent of stones were solitary (mean (SD) diameter 23 (5) mm) and 9.5% of the patients had more than three stones.

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The additional sealing of bronchial and gastrointestinal sutures and anastomoses, respectively, by means of fibrin sealant helped to significantly reduce the postoperative dehiscence rate; this rate amounted to 3.6% for additionally sealed bronchus stump occlusions and to 4.2% in gastrointestinal operations, whereby naturally in emergency abdominal operations the rate was higher (7.

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A total of 50 patients--37 female and 13 male--with an average age of 50 +/- 27 years (23-86 years), suffering from rim-calcified gallbladder stones, underwent extracorporeal shock-wave lithotripsy (ESWL), using an ultrasound-guided overhead module of Lithostar Plus (Siemens Company). The total number of stones was 87, with an average diameter of 16 +/- 7 (7-38) mm. 29 patients had a solitary stone, 13 had two and 8 patients three or more stones.

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