Closure of recurrent or persistent sacrococcygeal pilonidal wounds with a rotated lumbar flap
- 31 December 1965
- journal article
- Published by Elsevier in The American Journal of Surgery
- Vol. 110 (6) , 996-1000
- https://doi.org/10.1016/0002-9610(65)90198-4
Abstract
No abstract availableThis publication has 12 references indexed in Scilit:
- The etiology of pilonidal sinusDiseases of the Colon & Rectum, 1962
- A Simple Marsupialization Technic for Treatment of Pilonidal SinusAnnals of Surgery, 1960
- A Re-evaluation of the Pathogenesis of Pilonidal SinusAnnals of Surgery, 1959
- Treatment of Pilonidal Sinus by Primary ClosureA.M.A. Archives of Surgery, 1959
- Pilonidal sinus a new theory of originBritish Journal of Surgery, 1955
- Pilonidal Disease**Barbers’ pilonidal sinus3 occurs on the hand. Application of the word "pilonidal," therefore, which means only "hair nest" (pilus+nidus), is not limited to a condition of the coccygeal region. The term "pilonidal disease," nevertheless, usually denotes a pathologic condition in the region of the coccyx and in that sense we have used it in this article.—The Authors.Surgical Clinics of North America, 1952
- PILONIDAL CYSTS AND SINUSESA.M.A. Archives of Surgery, 1951
- NEW AND SUCCESSFUL CLOSED OPERATIVE PROCEDURE FOR PILONIDAL SINUSArchives of Surgery, 1946
- PILONIDAL CYSTS AND SINUSESAnnals of Surgery, 1943
- PILONIDAL CYSTS AND SINUSES: A METHOD OF WOUND CLOSURE*Annals of Surgery, 1942