Publications by authors named "R T Stolee"

Traumatic abdominal hernia is a rare injury with most reports documenting only one or two such cases. We describe five cases that were recognized during a 22-year period at a single trauma center. Physical examination often revealed abdominal wall tenderness and ecchymosis, but confirmation of hernia required additional testing in four of five patients.

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Objective: To determine the recurrence rate of small-bowel obstruction and differences in recurrence rates stratified by cause of obstruction and method of treatment.

Design: Retrospective chart review with average follow-up of 53 months (range, 0 to 129 months).

Setting: Combined community hospital/clinic tertiary referral center.

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Fifty-four (4%) of 1284 patients treated for adenocarcinoma of the colon and rectum during a 10-year period ending in 1989 underwent potentially curative resection of right colon lesions found during surgery to be adherent to adjacent organs, abdominal wall, or retroperitoneum. Final pathologic staging was as follows: modified Dukes' class B1 (n = 2), B2 (n = 24), C1 (n = 1), and C2 (n = 27). Thirteen (24%) patients had postoperative complications, including two (3.

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During the 20-year period ending December 1987, 179 consecutive splenic trauma patients were treated at a single institution. Procedures included splenectomy in 121 (67%) patients, splenectomy with autotransplantation in 7 (4%), splenorrhaphy in 23 (13%), laparotomy alone in 7 (4%), and nonoperative management in 21 (12%). Before 1976, all patients were treated by splenectomy.

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The experience of six referral trauma centers with 832 blunt splenic injuries was reviewed to determine the indications, methods, and outcome of nonoperative management. During this 5-year period, 112 splenic injuries were intentionally managed by observation. There were 40 (36%) patients less than 16 years old and 72 adults.

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