Displaying publications 1 - 20 of 72 in total

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  1. Smith GH
    Lancet, 1841;36:117-121.
    DOI: 10.1016/S0140-6736(02)37712-2
    Matched MeSH terms: Intestinal Obstruction
  2. Tripp CLH
    Matched MeSH terms: Intestinal Obstruction
  3. RODDIE TW
    Med J Malaya, 1957 Dec;12(2):423-5.
    PMID: 13515873
    Matched MeSH terms: Intestinal Obstruction*
  4. BALASEGARAM M
    Med J Malaya, 1963 Mar;17:187-90.
    PMID: 13969251
    Matched MeSH terms: Intestinal Obstruction*
  5. BALASEGARAM M
    Med J Malaysia, 1963 Dec;18:122-4.
    PMID: 14117280
    Matched MeSH terms: Intestinal Obstruction*
  6. Roe TN, Lal K, Cawkell WA
    Med J Malaya, 1968 Sep;23(1):78-9.
    PMID: 4237564
    Matched MeSH terms: Intestinal Obstruction/etiology*; Intestinal Obstruction/microbiology
  7. Lambeth J, Somasundaram K
    Med J Malaya, 1970 Mar;24(3):187-9.
    PMID: 4246798
    Matched MeSH terms: Intestinal Obstruction/chemically induced*; Intestinal Obstruction/etiology
  8. Ann WL
    Med J Malaysia, 1977 Jun;31(4):316-21.
    PMID: 927239
    Matched MeSH terms: Intestinal Obstruction/etiology*; Intestinal Obstruction/surgery
  9. Chellappa M, Ahmad K
    Med J Malaysia, 1978 Mar;32(3):245-6.
    PMID: 683051
    Matched MeSH terms: Intestinal Obstruction/surgery*
  10. Laidin AZ, Mohd Nor M, Abdul Wahab Y, Mahamooth Z
    Med J Malaysia, 1982 Sep;37(3):281-9.
    PMID: 7177013
    Over the six-veer periodfrom. 1976 to 1981, there were 241 neonates referred to the U.K.M. Paediatric Surgical Unit, General Hospital, Kuala Lumpur for alimentary tract obstruction and 207 were operated on. The three commonest conditions were anorectal anomalies (91 cases), Hirschsprung's disease (31 cases) and oesophageal atresia (30 cases). Overall operatioe mortality was 28.0 percent. This was high when preoperative complications lihe gut perforation (88.9 percent) or pneumonia (61.9 percent) and associated severe anomalies (90.9 percent) or chromosomal abnormalities (66.7 percent) were present. Emphasis is placed on the establishment of early diagnosis and the significance of the green vomit and maternal hydramnios is highlighted, The need is felt for more specialised nurses and the creation of a separate neonatal ICU in this hospital.
    Matched MeSH terms: Intestinal Obstruction/surgery*
  11. Murrell TG
    Int J Epidemiol, 1983 Jun;12(2):211-4.
    PMID: 6307898
    A hypothesis suggested in this paper is that pigbel, or enteritis necroticans was a common disease in mediaeval Europe when human habitats, food hygiene, protein deficiency and periodic meat feasting formed the basics of village life as they do in many Third World cultures today. Based on the Papua New Guinea experience with pigbel, it is suggested that health authorities should look closely at the epidemiology of the acute surgical abdomen in such communities. Enteritis necroticans may be the important predisposing lesion to mid-gut volvulus, jejunal and ileal ileus and other forms of small bowel strangulation in communities where protein deprivation, poor food hygiene, epochal meat feasting and staple diets containing trypsin inhibitors co-exist. Such human habitats occur in Central South America, Western Pacific, Asian and South-East Asian cultures. Isolated outbreaks of necrotising enteritis have been reported from Uganda, Malaysia and Indonesia but as yet no systematic epidemiological studies of the prevalence of small bowel strangulations have been described in the surgical literature of Third World countries. Now that enteritis necroticans is preventable by vaccination such studies should be undertaken.
    Matched MeSH terms: Intestinal Obstruction/etiology*
  12. Baruah DR
    Med J Malaysia, 1983 Sep;38(3):228-31.
    PMID: 6672566
    Gall stone is responsible for about 1% of total small bowel obstruction, 1.2 and recurrent gall stone ileus is even more unusual. 3 Gall stone ileus is caused by the impaction of the stone in bowel lumen. It was first described in a patient examined at autopsy by Bartholin in 1654. This paper based on unusual recurrent intestinal obstructions by a gall stone. The patient presented with large bowel obstruction and it was due to a large gall stone impacted in the pelvic colon. Four months later the same patient presented with small bowel obstruction due to large gall stone impacted in the terminal part of the ileum at 61 cms from the ileo-caecal valve. Gall stone obstruction of the colon is one of the rare complications. This rare complication usually occurs in elderly females' in whom there is frequently an underlying pathological condition at the site of obstruction in the colon. The calculus usually migrates through a cholecysto-colonic fistula in case of large bowel obstruction. In case of a small bowel obstruction the calculus usually migrates through a cholecysto-duodenal fistula. Diagnosis can be established by plain X-rays of the abdomen where there is gas shadow in the biliary system, sometimes the gall stone can be seen if it is radio opague (10-16% gall stone is radio opaque) at the site of obstruction. Otherwise diagnosis is always
    made at laparotomy.
    Matched MeSH terms: Intestinal Obstruction/etiology*
  13. Goon HK, Mohd Bahari HM
    Med J Malaysia, 1983 Sep;38(3):200-2.
    PMID: 6672562
    Obturator hernia is a rare clinical entity usually presenting with strangulation. Preoperative diagnosis is seldom made and this has contributed to a high. mortality. One should suspect a strangulated obturator hernia in an elderly thin female patient presenting with vague abdominal symptoms or intestinal obstruction associated with a positive Howship-Romberg sign. Urgent laparotomy is indicated to establish the diagnosis and for resection of bowel if indicated.
    Matched MeSH terms: Intestinal Obstruction/diagnosis*
  14. Yip FW, Lee SH
    Aust N Z J Surg, 1992 Aug;62(8):638-42.
    PMID: 1642584
    Since it was first described in 1978 the abdominal cocoon continues to be a rare cause of intestinal obstruction. So far this rare condition where the small intestine is encased in a fibrous membrane has been reported only in females. Diagnosis is usually made at laparotomy and the treatment of choice is lysis of adhesions. Proper recognition of this benign condition will result in the correct management of it and prevent unnecessary bowel resections. Five new cases including one male patient, together with a review of previous reports in the English literature, are presented.
    Matched MeSH terms: Intestinal Obstruction/diagnosis; Intestinal Obstruction/etiology*; Intestinal Obstruction/pathology; Intestinal Obstruction/surgery
  15. Raman S, Chan LL, Chang KW, Rachagan SP
    Med J Malaysia, 1992 Sep;47(3):228-30.
    PMID: 1491650
    A case of intestinal obstruction due to ileal atresia where the diagnosis was made prenatally by ultrasound is presented. Close monitoring of the fetus was done ultrasonographically to look for any evidence of meconium peritonitis. The baby was delivered preterm but weighed 3.3 kg. Laparotomy and enterostomy was done and the baby is currently well.
    Matched MeSH terms: Intestinal Obstruction/ultrasonography*
  16. Kum CK, Sim EK, Ngoi SS, Goh P, Sinniah R
    Med J Malaysia, 1992 Dec;47(4):323-7.
    PMID: 1303488
    Crohn's disease is extremely rare among Asians. Resection of strictures causing obstruction has traditionally been the accepted choice in surgical therapy. This may lead to problems such as iatrogenic short bowel syndrome and its sequelae. Stricturoplasty is an acceptable and safe alternative. We report a case where combined stricturoplasty and resection was performed safely and advocate its use.
    Matched MeSH terms: Intestinal Obstruction/etiology; Intestinal Obstruction/pathology; Intestinal Obstruction/surgery*
  17. Ng PE
    Med J Malaysia, 1993 Jun;48(2):217-21.
    PMID: 8350799
    Emergency left-sided colonic resections have traditionally been dealt with by employing staged resections due to the dangers of an anastomosis in unprepared bowel. A small series of 6 patients with left-sided colonic obstruction is presented in which a single stage primary anastomosis was done after an antegrade intraoperative colonic lavage. There were no deaths, infective complications or anastomotic leaks. Major series in the last decade using intraoperative colonic lavage are reviewed as well, to confirm that the method is safe, effective and warrants wider usage locally.
    Matched MeSH terms: Intestinal Obstruction/surgery*
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