4 results match your criteria: "National Military Hospital[Affiliation]"
Clin Ophthalmol
September 2023
Vietnam Department of Ophthalmology, National Military Hospital 108, Hanoi, Vietnam.
Purpose: Determine the incidence of some eye lesions in kidney transplant patients after one year at Military Hospital 103 and comment on related factors.
Patients And Methods: A cross-sectional study description of 111 kidney transplant patients (222 eyes) at Military Hospital 103. We assessed several eye lesions, including dry eyes, corneal conjunctival calcification, cataracts, and retinopathy.
Mil Med
December 2015
Department of Surgery, Western Michigan University-Homer Stryker MD School of Medicine, 1000 Oakland Drive, Kalamazoo, MI 49008.
A 23-year-old Afghan National Policeman sustained a right popliteal artery injury secondary to a ground-based blast. Initial treatment was an application of a tourniquet, and after triage at a local civilian hospital a shunt was placed, 3 hours after the initial injury, and then was transferred to Kabul for definitive care, 24 hours after injury. Extensive trauma to both legs precluded use of greater saphenous vein as a graft.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEur J Trauma Emerg Surg
June 2014
National Military Hospital, Kabul, Afghanistan.
Purpose: Management practices associated with war-related amputations in countries at war may be different from the recommendations of occidental Health Force Services due to the high numbers of wounded persons to treat in precarious conditions. This observational retrospective study documents the current management of local lower extremity amputees in Afghanistan. Surgical practices, with or without delayed primary closure (DPC), and prosthetic rehabilitation issues are analyzed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFScand J Surg
August 2006
Research Institute of Military Medicine, National Military Hospital, Helsinki, Finland.
Background And Aims: Gunshot wounds affecting the main vessels of the extremities mostly threaten limb salvage. The purpose of this study was to analyse the nature and severity of civilian vascular gunshot injuries of the extremities using a nation-wide database.
Material And Methods: Retrospective analysis of the Finnish Hospital Discharge Register, hospital records and death certificates over a 10-year period from January 1, 1990 to December 31, 1999.