Background: Suture repair became the standard treatment for perforated duodenal ulcer (PDU) due to the efficacy of modern anti-ulcer therapy. This study compared short-term outcomes of open versus laparoscopic suture repair of PDU in patients without risk factors.
Method: Patients with perforated duodenal ulcer were selected for open or laparoscopic suture repair.
In the last decade of the past century, as laparoscopy was introduced in our clinic in 1993, minimal access therapy (MAT--endoscopy, angiography, interventional imagery) had a positive and constant evolution. Our paper retrospectively evaluates the interventions performed between 2003-2005 (group A) compared to those performed between 1993-1995 (group B). We observed a 17.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChirurgia (Bucur)
November 2006
Small bowel perforations in blunt abdominal trauma (BAT), especially in multiply injured patients, are difficult to diagnose in the first hours after the accident, either clinically or by imagistic studies. A less encountered diagnostic modality is diagnostic laparoscopy (DL), selectively indicated. We present the case of a patient with BAT and complex pelvic fracture, hemodynamically stable, with TS= 15, who clinically had abdominal tenderness and on ultrasound (US) and CT scan, had free intra-abdominal fluid (FIAF), without any injuries of a solid viscus, which led us to suspect a hollow viscus injury.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMalnutrition in surgical patients can be present since their admission into hospital or can appear in the postoperative period. Early postoperative enteral nutrition (EPEN) is recommended to these patients as often as possible. In cases where the patients are severely malnourished with major digestive surgical interventions which we estimate that will be unable to feed orally efficient minimum 7-10 days postoperatively, we recommend EPEN on jejunostomy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLaparoscopic jejunostomy (LJ) represents a new way of enteral nutrition (EN) for surgical malnourished patients. LJ is an alternative form of therapy, with restricted indications to the few cases when classical way for EN (nosogastroenteral tube feeding, PEG/PEJ, surgical gastrostomy), are contraindicated or can not be used, and the patient is unable to eat. This technique is also preferred to the open surgical jejunostomy.
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