4.Giant Bladder Stone Transurethrally Removed in One Piece Without Urethral Injury
Masa Hayase ; Takehiko Okumura ; Yukihiro Umemoto ; Syoichi Sasaki ; Yutaro Hayashi ; Kenjiro Kohri
Journal of Rural Medicine 2006;2(1):59-61
We operated on an 87-year-old female suffering from a giant bladder stone. Her chief complaint was fever and lower abdominal pain, which was caused by lodgement in the urethra. The stone was easily removed in one piece without breakage or injury to the urethral orifice and urethra using forceps normally used for grasping bones in orthopedics. The stone measured 75×50×45 mm and was composed of magnesium ammonium phosphate. To our knowledge, this is the largest bladder and/or urethral stone that was transurethrally removed without being broken. Thus, forceps that are normally used for grasping bones in orthopedics can be used to remove giant bladder stones without leaving stone fragments.
Bladder Calculi
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Injury inflicted to the body by an external force
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Large
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grasp
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One
5.Anterior shoulder dislocation with axillary artery and nerve injury.
M A Mohamed Razif ; V Rajasingam
The Medical journal of Malaysia 2002;57(4):496-8
We report a rare case of left axillary artery injury associated with anterior dislocation of the left shoulder in a 25 yrs old male as a result of a road traffic accident. The shoulder dislocation was reduced. A left upper limb angiogram showed an obstructed left axillary artery. The obstructed segment was surgically reconstructed with a Dacron graft. Six months post operation in follow up, he was found to have good left shoulder function and no neurovascular deficit. This is an injury that could have been easily missed without a simple clinical examination.
Shoulder
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Arteries
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Adenohypophyseal Diseases
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Injury inflicted to the body by an external force
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Nerve injury, NOS
7.Delayed spontaneous traumatic pneumocephalus.
T Hari Chandran ; N Prepageran ; R Philip ; K Gopala ; A L Ahmad Zubaidi ; M A Jalaludin
The Medical journal of Malaysia 2007;62(5):411-2
Pneumocephalus or collection of air in the intracranial cavity can occur after trauma or surgery. However, delayed pneumocephalus occurring months after the initial injury is not common. We would like to report a case of spontaneous traumatic pneumoencephalocele presenting with transient recurrent hemiparesis 14 months after the initial trauma.
month
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Deferred
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Wounds and Injuries
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Injury inflicted to the body by an external force
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Surgical aspects
8.Primary repair of colonic injuries at the Kundiawa and Madang General Hospitals, Papua New Guinea.
Papua and New Guinea medical journal 2008;51(1-2):43-46
In this study, we evaluated the safety of primary repair of colon injury in a low-volume tropical hospital setting. Between 1998 and 2005, 18 consecutive patients who underwent emergency operation for civilian traumatic colon injury were studied. The main outcome measures were the mortality and morbidity rates and the total length of the hospital stay. The mean hospital stay for one-stage repair was 12 days versus 29 days for the two-stage procedure, which was a significant difference (p = 0.009). There was no death reported from this study. There was no significant difference in postoperative septic complications between the one-stage and two-stage procedures. One-stage repair of colonic injury is a safe and cost-effective option for selected patients in the tropical hospital setting.
Diagnostic Neoplasm Staging
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Hospitals
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Injury inflicted to the body by an external force
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Primary
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Papua New Guinea
9.Physical Therapy for Compound Knee Ligament Injury After Simultaneous Reconstruction of Anterior and Posterior Cruciate Ligaments
Keisuke SAKURADA ; Seiji SHIMADA ; Miyoko KISHINO ; Yoshihisa SATOU ; Kanae HAKAMADA ; Toshiya MIURA
Journal of the Japanese Association of Rural Medicine 2008;57(2):75-82
We performed physical therapy on a patient who had undergone simultaneous reconstruction of anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) and posterior cruciate ligament (PCL) for compound knee ligament injury. The physical therapy program was designed based on Tooyama's concept published in 1996 and our own regimens for postoperative therapy for separate ACL and PCL reconstructions.The results of our physical therapy were as follows: In four months after the surgery, the range of knee motion had been fully recovered. In 16 months postoperatively, the knee ligament had become stable. Knee extention strength had been restored 87% and its flexion strength 103%. The functional ability test found that knee performance was good.Worthy of note were the following three main features of this physical therapy: (1) To minimize stress on ligament until the minimum recovery level of recovery is expected after reconstruction, muscular workout to make quadriceps and hamstrings contracted simultaneiusly was performed so as not to induce contractions of only hamstrings; (2) We kept the chief physician posted on the recovery status of the knee motion range since mobilized arthroscopy might have been required because of knee contracture; (3) Knee coodination training was performed to enhance knee functional ability.
Knee
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Physical Therapy (Specialty)
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Ligaments
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Injury inflicted to the body by an external force
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Adenohypophyseal Diseases