Il Giornale di chirurgia
-
Pectoralis major rupture is a very uncommon injury first time described by Patissier in 1822. Tears are classified on the type (partial and complete) or on the site (tendinous, myotendinous junction, intramuscular). Ruptures are reported in young high-performance athletes as results of eccentric contractions of the musculotendinous unit. ⋯ Surgery was performed through a modified delto-pectoral approach; pectoralis major tendon was attached at its anatomic insertion using two metallic anchors. The patient as been immobilized in a sling for 30 days and then assisted physiotherapy begun; strenght exercises were allowed at 90 days. At a mean follow-up of 24 months results were excellent in all cases with restoration of strenght and coming back to previously sports activity.
-
Il Giornale di chirurgia · Jan 2009
[Clinical governance and continuous quality improvement in surgical organizations].
Recently the awareness had progressively strengthened that the main interest of health care organizations is effectiveness and appropriateness of clinical performance. They have a statutory duty to seek quality improvement through clinical governance. All health care operators are involved in clinical governance implementation, in respect of their organizational positions toward continuous quality improvement. In this way health care organizations, professionals and patients will benefit of outcomes of the change.
-
Il Giornale di chirurgia · Aug 2008
Case Reports[Severe obstruction of upper airway by cervicomediastinal goitre in patients with cardiopulmonary insufficiency].
The symptoms of the retrosternal goitre are due to the compression especially on airway, by thyroid growth in mediastinum. We present a case of an old woman affected by chronic obstructive broncopneumopathy, atrial fibrillation and mediastinal goitre. ⋯ The risk of total thyroidectomy was related to the possible tracheomalacia. The surgery improved respiratory performance.
-
Il Giornale di chirurgia · Jun 2008
[Thoracentesis and pleurodesis in the treatment of pleural effusion. Personal experience].
The pleural effusion is a sign of pulmonary, pleural or extrapulmonary, benign or malignant pathology. Our aim is to bring our experience on the treatment of the malignant pleural effusion through thoracentesis and successive pleurodesis. ⋯ The pleural effusion is a pathological condition that usually needs repeated operative procedures with serious danger for the patient, however without definitive results. On the basis of our experience and considering the characteristics of sclerosing agents, we conclude that the sure, effective and economic agent for the pleurodesis is the des-asbestos talc.
-
Il Giornale di chirurgia · May 2008
Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study[New therapeutic strategies for the treatment of difficult wounds].
The medical-surgical treatment of the difficult wounds represents a socio-sanitary problem in continuous growth, currently involving in our Country around 2,000,000 people. The "difficult wound" is a loss of cutaneous substances, usually due to multifactorial pathogenesis, that do not spontaneously lead to a complete recovery. Numerous studies in the literature have evidenced that the use of the advanced wound dressings allows to reach the best clinical and economic results in the process of recovery of the difficult wounds. The advanced would dressing assures a longer period of permanence on the injury and shorten the time of treatment and, as a consequence, it is required a smaller number of applications in comparison with the traditional medications. The Wound Bed Preparation (WBP) can be defined as the global and coordinate management of the cutaneous injury, enabling to chip off the local barriers to the recovery, or promoting the effectiveness of the innovative therapeutic instruments. The term advanced wound dressing indicates the dressing material having biocompatibility characteristics. The purpose of the advanced wound dressings is the one to create the ideal environment for the cicatrization process and isolate the wound from traumas and external infections. ⋯ In synthesis, it emerges that the advanced dressings, if correctly used, offer advantages in terms of clinical effectiveness (rapid recovery from the injury), patient quality of the life and cheapness. It has also to be considered that the difficult wound is often the epiphenomenon of a systemic illness. The difficult wound requires, therefore, a multidisciplinary treatment.