5 results match your criteria: "Graz Hospital[Affiliation]"
Ann Surg
April 2022
Division of Surgical Oncology, Department of Surgery, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, Aurora, CO.
Objective: The ISGPS aimed to develop a universally accepted definition for PPAP for standardized reporting and outcome comparison.
Background: PPAP is an increasingly recognized complication after partial pancreatic resections, but its incidence and clinical impact, and even its existence are variable because an internationally accepted consensus definition and grading system are lacking.
Methods: The ISGPS developed a consensus definition and grading of PPAP with its members after an evidence review and after a series of discussions and multiple revisions from April 2020 to May 2021.
Surgery
November 2018
Department of General and Pancreatic Surgery, The Pancreas Institute, University of Verona Hospital Trust, Verona, Italy.
Background: The optimal nutritional therapy in the field of pancreatic surgery is still debated.
Methods: An international panel of recognized pancreatic surgeons and pancreatologists decided that the topic of nutritional support was of importance in pancreatic surgery. Thus, they reviewed the best contemporary literature and worked to develop a position paper to provide evidence supporting the integration of appropriate nutritional support into the overall management of patients undergoing pancreatic resection.
J Clin Oncol
March 2003
Medical Department, Graz University, and Second Department of Surgery, Graz Hospital, Graz, Austria.
Purpose: To determine whether the addition of aminoglutethimide to tamoxifen is able to improve the outcome in postmenopausal patients with hormone receptor-positive, early-stage breast cancer.
Patients And Methods: A total of 2,021 postmenopausal women were randomly assigned to receive either tamoxifen for 5 years alone or tamoxifen in combination with aminoglutethimide (500 mg/d) for the first 2 years of treatment. Tamoxifen was administered at 40 mg/d for the first 2 years and at 20 mg/d for 3 years.
Abdom Imaging
March 1999
Department of Radiology, University of Graz Hospital and Karl Franzens Medical School, Auenbruggerplatz 9, A-8036 Graz, Austria.
A 26-year-old man with acute deterioration of recurrent abdominal pain was admitted to the hospital. Plain film (abdominal radiographs), spiral computed tomography (CT), and barium contrast studies were performed. A left paraduodenal hernia causing acute jejunal obstruction was identified on upper gastrointestinal barium studies and spiral CT.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Biomech
September 1995
Graz Hospital for Accident Surgery, Austria.
The achilles tendon is one of the strongest tendons in the human body, and a healthy tendon will only rupture under very severe conditions. Experiments and statistics show a high probability of tendon rupture in the case of a person trying to make a quick start and thereby toppling over in the ankle joint. Toppling over means a quick overturning in the lower ankle joint as it may occur when starting out of the sagittal plane.
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