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Publications (2)2.94 Total impact

  • Article: Side-to-side anastomosis fashioned as stoma after sigmoid resection for sigmoid volvulus: a case report.
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    ABSTRACT: Colonic volvulus is one of the causes of large bowel obstruction with sigmoid colon being the most usually affected part. Surgery is the gold standard when signs of peritonitis are present or endoscopic decompression fails. We report the case of 65-year-old man with acute large bowel obstruction due to sigmoid volvulus who underwent a laparoscopic-assisted sigmoid resection on an emergency basis. The condition of the bowel wall precluded a primary anastomosis. But instead, a side-to-side anastomosis that its common blind stump was brought out as an end stoma was performed. The postoperative period was eventless. The patient was discharged on the 6th postoperative day. Eight weeks after the initial operation, the patient was readmitted for the secondary closure of the anastomotic stoma. Local anesthesia and minor sedation were enough in order to perform the stoma take down. Laparoscopic-assisted sigmoid resection is a useful adjunct to the surgical armamentarium when facing the problem of sigmoid volvulus. When a safe restoration of the alimentary tract continuity cannot be achieved safely with a primary anastomosis, the proposed anastomotic stoma technique is a useful and practical alternative.
    Techniques in Coloproctology 09/2011; 15 Suppl 1:S33-6. · 1.29 Impact Factor
  • Article: The evolution of lower limb amputation through the ages. Historical note.
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    ABSTRACT: The aim of this study was to highlight the important stages of the evolution of limb amputation through the ages through the search of the relevant international literature. Limb amputation is one of the most serious surgical operations, which is associated with high mortality and morbidity. Evidence regarding the execution of limb amputation can be found back in Neolithic times. The most important steps in the evolution of the technique of limb amputation were made in the 16th, 17th, and 18th centuries when A. Pare' introduced the vessel ligation and the French barber surgeon Morell introduced the use of a tourniquet to reduce the bleeding. During the same period, from the ''one-stage circular cut'' the technique evolved to either ''three-stage circular cut'' or to ''flap amputation'', single or double. Limb amputation represents one of the oldest and most serious surgical operations. Its evolution parallels the maturation process of surgery, with the major developments in the technique to have been made from the 16th to the 18th century. In the beginning of the 21st century, limb amputation appears to be a safe operation ending up with a functional stump.
    International angiology: a journal of the International Union of Angiology 01/2008; 26(4):385-9. · 1.65 Impact Factor

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