Exercise training confers a greater improvement in claudication and maximum walking distance than PTA, especially in patients with disease confined to the superficial femoral artery.
Postendograft AAA rupture is infrequent, although the true incidence rate is unclear because of inadequate follow-up of individual device designs. Tube endografts should be limited to the rare patient with ideal anatomy, no other alternatives, and at high risk for standard open repair. Prevention of aneurysm rupture requires long-term surveillance with attention to subtle imaging abnormalities and the establishment of reliable follow-up protocols for specific devices. The outcome of postendograft aneurysm rupture is similar to that of rupture without prior endograft therapy.
Objective-To establish the safety, short term outcome, and theatre costs of transabdominal laparoscopic repair of inguinal hernia performed as day surgery.Design-Randomised controlled trial.
Received wisdom commends a policy of maximizing the ratio of below-knee to above-knee amputations in patients with end-stage arterial disease. After adoption of this policy, the long-term outcome of 100 consecutive lower-limb amputations in 96 patients was monitored by annual review for 5 years. The ratio of primary below-knee to above-knee amputations was 2:1, with 9 per cent of below-knee amputations undergoing revision to a higher level. At 2 years after amputation only 26 per cent of patients were successfully walking out of doors, while 40 per cent had died. By 5 years 67 per cent were dead and only 9 per cent continued to walk out of doors with an artificial limb, although a further 8 per cent continued to use the limb within the confines of their own homes. In a previous audit of 193 amputations performed during the 3.5 years to December 1984, stump healing was a problem in 45 per cent of primary below-knee amputations, compared with 25 per cent in the present study. Although the below- to above-knee ratio in 1984 was only 1:2, the overall rehabilitation rate, as determined by the proportion of patients able to walk at 2 years, was 34 per cent. It is concluded that increasing the proportion of below-knee amputations from one-third to two-thirds of lower-limb amputations for occlusive arterial disease does not improve effective rehabilitation rates. Received wisdom on the desirability of a high below- to above-knee ratio may be wrong.
Enhanced recovery programmes after colorectal resections reduce length-of-stay and may reduce 30 days morbidity and increase 30 days readmission without increasing mortality.
Transection of the sympathetic trunk between the first and second thoracic sympathetic ganglia initially cures 100% of patients treated primarily for palmar hyperhidrosis. Technically successful 2nd and 3rd thoracic sympathetic ganglionectomy initially cures 100% of patients with axillary hyperhidrosis. Compensatory sweating is common after bilateral sympathectomy. Recurrent palmar hyperhidrosis occurs in 5.4% of cases, but can be cured by a second thoracoscopic sympathectomy. Horner's syndrome is an avoidable complication of thoracoscopic sympathectomy.
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