Applied anatomical characteristics of vascularized iliac muscle flap and its clinical application in repairing oral and maxillofacial defects
CONCLUSIONS: DCIA and its main branches have a relatively constant course and distribution in the ilioinguinal region. According to the conditions of different defect areas, different tissue types of chimeric flaps based on DCIA can be prepared to meet the repair requirements. The donor site complications can be controlled, and it is an ideal choice to repair mandibular defects.PMID:38494968 (Source: Shanghai Journal of Stomatology)
Source: Shanghai Journal of Stomatology - March 18, 2024 Category: Dentistry Authors: Yang Zhang Qing-Hai Zhu Yong-Jie Zhang Chen-Xing Wang Jin-Hai Ye Source Type: research

Applied anatomical characteristics of vascularized iliac muscle flap and its clinical application in repairing oral and maxillofacial defects
CONCLUSIONS: DCIA and its main branches have a relatively constant course and distribution in the ilioinguinal region. According to the conditions of different defect areas, different tissue types of chimeric flaps based on DCIA can be prepared to meet the repair requirements. The donor site complications can be controlled, and it is an ideal choice to repair mandibular defects.PMID:38494968 (Source: Shanghai Journal of Stomatology)
Source: Shanghai Journal of Stomatology - March 18, 2024 Category: Dentistry Authors: Yang Zhang Qing-Hai Zhu Yong-Jie Zhang Chen-Xing Wang Jin-Hai Ye Source Type: research

Applied anatomical characteristics of vascularized iliac muscle flap and its clinical application in repairing oral and maxillofacial defects
CONCLUSIONS: DCIA and its main branches have a relatively constant course and distribution in the ilioinguinal region. According to the conditions of different defect areas, different tissue types of chimeric flaps based on DCIA can be prepared to meet the repair requirements. The donor site complications can be controlled, and it is an ideal choice to repair mandibular defects.PMID:38494968 (Source: Shanghai Journal of Stomatology)
Source: Shanghai Journal of Stomatology - March 18, 2024 Category: Dentistry Authors: Yang Zhang Qing-Hai Zhu Yong-Jie Zhang Chen-Xing Wang Jin-Hai Ye Source Type: research

Feasibility of tele-visits after elective ventral hernia surgery: Experience from an Indian tertiary care center
The COVID-19 pandemic has disrupted traditional postoperative follow-up for elective surgeries, prompting a rapid shift to telehealthcare, as evidenced in high-income countries with robust electronic medical record linkage and ancillary support teams.1,2 However, adoption in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) is scarce, particularly with challenges faced by a considerable rural patient population. In our early experience at an Indian tertiary care center, we closely followed up with patients who underwent elective ventral hernia repair (VHR), employing both in-person and telephonic approaches. (Source: Surgery)
Source: Surgery - March 18, 2024 Category: Surgery Authors: Varun V. Bansal, Yash Kamath, Sahil Waghmare, Monty U. Khajanchi, Nobhojit Roy Source Type: research

Corrigendum to: Open retromuscular keyhole compared with Sugarbaker mesh for parastomal hernia repair: Early results of a randomized clinical trial ‘175(3):813-821.’
The authors regret to inform that there is change in the value presented in the results section: “Within the first 90 days postoperatively, there were 19 (12.7%) patients who experienced a surgical site infection, 15 (10%) patients who experienced a surgical site occurrence, and 24 patients (16%) who required a procedural intervention for wound morbidity, with no difference between KH and SB arms (P>.05). ” (Source: Surgery)
Source: Surgery - March 18, 2024 Category: Surgery Authors: Sara M. Maskal, Jonah D. Thomas, Benjamin T. Miller, Aldo Fafaj, Samuel J. Zolin, Katie Montelione, Ryan C. Ellis, Ajita S. Prabhu, David M. Krpata, Lucas R.A. Beffa, Adele Costanzo, Xinyan Zheng, Steven Rosenblatt, Michael J. Rosen, Clayton C. Petro Source Type: research