109 results match your criteria: "The Ipswich Hospital NHS Trust.[Affiliation]"

A patient was referred for superior vena cava (SVC) stenting prior to surgical biopsy of a mediastinal mass. A technically satisfactory insertion was followed 6 months later by cardiac tamponade with two legs of the Wallstent having perforated the wall of the SVC.

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A rapidly expanding lesion in the neck: unusual presentation of Castleman's disease.

Int J Oral Maxillofac Surg

October 2001

Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery, The Ipswich Hospital NHS Trust, Suffolk, UK.

We report a painless but rapidly enlarging 9 cm x 4 cm lobulated hard neck mass. CT scanning suggested lymphoid tissue that was not confirmed by cytopathology. Histopathological analysis of the excision specimen detected Castleman's disease, extending to the resection margin.

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Background: There is no technique in general use that reliably predicts the outcome of manual aspiration of spontaneous pneumothorax. We have hypothesised that the absence of a pleural leak at the time of aspiration will identify a group of patients in whom immediate discharge is unlikely to be complicated by early lung re-collapse and have tested this hypothesis by using a simple bedside tracer gas technique.

Methods: Eighty four episodes of primary spontaneous pneumothorax and 35 episodes of secondary spontaneous pneumothorax were studied prospectively.

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Intramuscular hemangioma of the temporalis muscle.

J Oral Maxillofac Surg

February 2001

Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery, The Ipswich Hospital NHS Trust, Suffolk, United Kingdom.

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Gas production as a part of disk degeneration can occur, but it rarely causes clinical nerve compression syndromes. A rare case of gaseous degeneration in a prolapsed lumbar intervertebral disk causing acute cauda equina syndrome is described. Radiologic features and intraoperative findings are reported.

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Ultracision: the harmonic scalpel and its possible uses in maxillofacial surgery.

Br J Oral Maxillofac Surg

October 2000

Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery, The Ipswich Hospital NHS Trust, Suffolk, UK.

We report on the potential uses and benefits of a new development in incisive technology. The harmonic scalpel uses high-frequency mechanical energy to offer the surgeon controlled and precise incision and haemostasis. Vessels up to 2 mm in diameter may be sealed by coaptation with the blade before division.

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Hyperventilation: cause or effect?

J Accid Emerg Med

September 2000

Accident and Emergency Department, The Ipswich Hospital NHS Trust.

A young person presenting with shortness of breath is common to the accident and emergency department. Usually this hyperventilation is anxiety related or a panic attack, but sometimes it can be caused by a serious underlying condition like pulmonary embolus. Acute shortness of breath in any patient should never be dismissed lightly.

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Management of severe postnasal haemorrhage: the Kingsley splint revisited.

Br J Oral Maxillofac Surg

August 2000

Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery, The Ipswich Hospital NHS Trust, Suffolk, UK.

Postnasal haemorrhage accompanying severe craniofacial trauma may have catastrophic consequences if not arrested promptly. The airway has usually been secured and the cervical spine stabilized, but apart from fluid replacement, other attempts to control haemorrhage in the resuscitation room of the accident and emergency department may be to no avail. We wish to draw attention to a simple device that was introduced over 100 years ago and which may rapidly aid haemostasis and prevent the onset of hypovolaemic shock.

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British motor neuron disease twin study.

J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry

June 1997

Clinical Neurology Department, The Ipswich Hospital NHS Trust, UK.

Objectives: To investigate the cause of sporadic motor neuron disease (MND) by twin study, so allowing (1) estimation of the genetic contribution, and (2) collection of matched pairs for a case-control study of possible environmental factors.

Methods: 10872 death certificates bearing the diagnosis MND were collected from 1979 to 1989 inclusive. Inspection of individual birth entries allowed identification of potential twins.

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