[The great omentum in surgical pathology].

Chirurgia (Bucur)

Clinica III Chirurgie Generală, UMF Craiova.

Published: March 2005

The aim of the survey is to bring forward the relationship structure-function-pathology of the great omentum from the surgical point of view. The common origin (similar) with that of the spleen and the structural particularities give the great omentum distinct responding potentialities in pathology and these have challenged the anatomists, anatomo-pathologists and surgeons to a more careful and deep research for the last one hundred years. The study corroborates data from literature with the authors' experimental, clinical and microscopic research regarding the vascularization, the lymphoreticular component and the innervation, with the aim of emphasizing the functions of the great omentum in pathological conditions: plasticity, adherence to traumatized and swollen areas, neo-vascularization, absorption of fluids and phagocytosis. Concerning the innervation, by using special techniques, we have managed to emphasize neurofibres in interlobular spaces. By using clinical observation and microscopic study, we can notice dynamically the changes of the great omentum in the inflammatory pathology and in front of the malignant tumour invasion. Last but not least, this survey pays our respects to professor Ion Kiricuta, the first who used the great omentum in plastic surgery and whose studies stimulated the research concerning the great omentum that has been a subject for the international conferences for the last 20 years.

Download full-text PDF

Source

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

great omentum
28
omentum surgical
8
omentum
7
great
6
[the great
4
surgical pathology]
4
pathology] aim
4
aim survey
4
survey bring
4
bring forward
4

Similar Publications

Introduction And Importance: Transomental hernia (TOH) is an extremely rare clinical condition that represents 1-4% of all internal hernias. Spontaneous TOH occurs in patients with no history of surgery or previous abdominal trauma. It happens after protrusion of the abdominal viscera, commonly the small bowel loops through a defect on the great omentum.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The intrauterine device (IUD) is currently one of the most widely used methods due to its great effectiveness. Uterine perforation and migration of the device is one of its most serious complications, although rare. In most patients, it usually occurs at the time of placement and goes unnoticed; however, it can also occur late.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: A laparoscopy-based scoring system was developed by Fagotti et al (Fagotti or Predictive Index value (PIV)score) based on the intraoperative presence or absence of carcinomatosis on predefined sites. Later, the authors updated the PIV score calculated only in the absence of one or both absolute criteria of nonresectability (mesenteric retraction and miliary carcinomatosis of the small bowel) (updated PIV model).

Objective: The aim was to demonstrate the noninferiority of ultrasound to other imaging methods (contrast enhanced computed tomography (CT) and whole-body diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (WB-DWI)/MRI) in predicting nonresectable tumor (defined as residual disease >1 cm) using the updated PIV model in patients with tubo-ovarian cancer.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Spontaneous omental infarction in an obese young female patient treated with laparoscopy: a case report.

J Surg Case Rep

June 2024

Department of General Surgery, Prof. Dr. Cemil Taşcıoğlu Şehir Hastanesi, 34384 Şişli/Istanbul, Turkey.

Partial infarction of the great omentum is a rare cause of abdominal pain and may present as a surgical emergency. Omental infarction might occur due to its torsion, but cases without obvious cause are reported. Risk factors related to this condition are overweight, obesity, abdominal trauma, recent abdominal surgery, hypercoagulability, postprandial vascular congestion and an increase in intra-abdominal pressure.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!