Massive Bowel Infarction
- 22 January 1959
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Massachusetts Medical Society in New England Journal of Medicine
- Vol. 260 (4) , 162-167
- https://doi.org/10.1056/nejm195901222600404
Abstract
RECENT experience at this hospital and elsewhere suggests that certain cases of massive bowel infarction from arterial insufficiency can be satisfactorily handled by a direct approach to the occluded artery, by either embolectomy1 2 3 or thromboendarterectomy,4 thus expanding therapeutic possibilities in patients in whom resection would be impossible or crippling. Cases have been encountered, however, in which this approach has not been rewarding — for example, where no obstructions are found in the mesenteric vessels despite bowel infarction or where ischemia persists after early and complete embolectomy. In both situations bowel ischemia has been apparently due to a factor other than . . .Keywords
This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- Infarction of the Bowel in Cardiac FailureNew England Journal of Medicine, 1958
- Acute and Chronic Thrombosis of the Mesenteric Arteries Associated with MalabsorptionNew England Journal of Medicine, 1958
- Surgical Operations on the Superior Mesenteric ArteryArchives of Surgery, 1957
- Superior-Mesenteric-Artery Embolectomy in the Treatment of Massive Mesenteric InfarctionNew England Journal of Medicine, 1957
- Mesenteric Vascular OcclusionArchives of Surgery, 1956
- MESENTERIC VASCULAR OCCLUSIONJAMA, 1954