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1  distinguish benign from malignant causes of bowel obstruction.
2  for intraabdominal foreign body and 49% for bowel obstruction.
3 , the mesenteric vessels, and signs of small-bowel obstruction.
4 tigation and nonsurgical management of small-bowel obstruction.
5  of ICC leads to loss of function in partial bowel obstruction.
6 ment of inflammatory bowel disease and small-bowel obstruction.
7 cluding rate of soiling and development of a bowel obstruction.
8 eveloped signs and symptoms of partial small bowel obstruction.
9 nema may be used to confirm or exclude large-bowel obstruction.
10 ssive disorder causing a functional neonatal bowel obstruction.
11 on, is the most frequent cause of congenital bowel obstruction.
12 ic cefoxitin, and an operative procedure for bowel obstruction.
13 , one requiring a second procedure for small bowel obstruction.
14 R), is the most frequent cause of congenital bowel obstruction.
15 ents presented with symptoms consistent with bowel obstruction.
16 ble decrease in the overall cost of managing bowel obstruction.
17 tive versus nonoperative management of small bowel obstruction.
18  of choice in the diagnosis of partial small bowel obstruction.
19 mpared with plain x-rays in the diagnosis of bowel obstruction.
20 ecific than plain x-rays in the diagnosis of bowel obstruction.
21 ere used in 4 patients to show partial small bowel obstruction.
22 n establish the diagnosis and cause of large-bowel obstruction.
23 ed bowel wall thickening without evidence of bowel obstruction.
24 limited survival after surgery for malignant bowel obstruction.
25  setting of emergency surgical management of bowel obstruction.
26 e pain often with vomiting due to oedematous bowel obstruction.
27 he nonsurgical management of malignant large bowel obstruction.
28 early management and palliation of malignant bowel obstruction.
29 ntation for perforation, bladder stones, and bowel obstruction.
30  in patients presenting with malignant large bowel obstruction.
31 al metastases and in 11 patients with benign bowel obstruction.
32 tinal bleed 17.4% vs 24.1%, P < 0.001; small bowel obstruction 10.6% vs 14.9%, P < 0.001; appendiciti
33 scess (1.3%), anastomotic dehiscence (6.4%), bowel obstruction (11.7%), and anastomotic stenosis in n
34 re neutropenic enterocolitis (28%) and small bowel obstruction (12%); the cause remained uncertain in
35 47.7% vs 53.4%, P < 0.001 (RCV = 38%); small bowel obstruction: 13.6% vs 17.5%, P < 0.001 (RCV = 14%)
36 , most commonly peripheral neuropathy (19%), bowel obstruction (14%), and ureteral obstruction (12%).
37 ciated with significant morbidity related to bowel obstruction (14.5%, range 0%-29%).
38 atients had 56 major complications: 23 small-bowel obstructions (14 internal hernias and nine adhesio
39                       Complications included bowel obstruction (18), wound infection (10), pneumonia
40 omatic marginal ulcers, 5 stomal stenoses, 3 bowel obstructions, 26 incisional hernias (nonlaparoscop
41 ula (5%), intraabdominal abscess (4%), small bowel obstruction (4%), and postoperative hemorrhage (4%
42   Adult intussusception represents 1% of all bowel obstructions, 5% of all intussusceptions, and 0.00
43               There were three grade 3 small bowel obstructions (7%) during cycles 3, 9, and 15.
44 tions such as leaks, staple line dehiscence, bowel obstruction, abscess, hepatic or splenic infarctio
45 lties during reoperations, rather than small bowel obstructions, account for the majority of adhesion
46 luding fractures, cardiovascular events, and bowel obstruction, although further research on medical
47 tion in the TVA group; 1 early postoperative bowel obstruction and 1 case of urinary retention in the
48 omputed tomography (CT) for diagnosing small-bowel obstruction and CT for determining complications.
49 crocolpopexy appears to result in less small bowel obstruction and ileus however, intraoperative bowe
50 reports were reviewed for diagnosis of small-bowel obstruction and ischemia.
51 CCs) to fully colonize the bowel, leading to bowel obstruction and megacolon.
52  mesenteric arteries or veins to complicated bowel obstruction and overdistention.
53                                              Bowel obstruction and stricture were other principal lon
54 logic approach to the investigation of small-bowel obstruction and the timing of surgical interventio
55 nsitivities of abdominal CT were highest for bowel obstruction and urolithiasis at 75% and 68%, respe
56 ee air, free fluid, portal venous gas, small-bowel obstruction, and bowel dilatation.
57 mon diagnosis, followed by perforated ulcer, bowel obstruction, and cholecystitis.
58 ibility to inflammatory bowel disease, small-bowel obstruction, and esophagitis.
59 nal or pelvic injury that cause pelvic pain, bowel obstruction, and infertility in women.
60 ve surgical site infection, hernia, or small-bowel obstruction, and none died.
61 venous stasis ulcers, intestinal leak, small bowel obstruction, and pulmonary embolus.
62 sothelium covered surfaces, causing ascites, bowel obstruction, and tumor cachexia.
63 in the investigation of Crohn disease, small-bowel obstruction, and unexplained gastrointestinal blee
64 eated with endoscopic dilatation, late small bowel obstructions, and incisional hernias.
65 mesenteric ischemia, gastrointestinal bleed, bowel obstruction, appendicitis) where the best treatmen
66 imaging findings in multiple causes of large-bowel obstruction are illustrated and compared with acut
67    Patients who had second-look surgery with bowel obstruction as a symptom and those in whom the amo
68 years; a second had acute incarceration with bowel obstruction at 4 years, with a frequency of 1.8/10
69 t required reexploration for suspected small bowel obstruction at any time after transplantation.
70 orbidity after operation was 24%, with small bowel obstruction being the most common complication (13
71 e in clinical problem areas, including small-bowel obstruction, bleeding, and Crohn and celiac diseas
72                                              Bowel obstruction (BO) is a common complication of advan
73                      Sonography demonstrated bowel obstruction by showing fluid-filled dilated bowel
74              Gallstone ileus is a mechanical bowel obstruction caused by a biliary calculus originati
75              Care of patients with malignant bowel obstruction caused by peritoneal metastases may pr
76 f internal hernia included evidence of small-bowel obstruction; clustering of small bowel; stretched,
77  stenosis, occlusion of the Roux limb, small-bowel obstruction due to adhesions or internal hernia, a
78 omatic treatment of patients with inoperable bowel obstruction due to peritoneal carcinomatosis.
79 iable infectious colitis, colonic stricture, bowel obstruction, fibrosis, or Crohn disease.
80  the estimated 3,452,536 cases of mechanical bowel obstruction from 2004 to 2009, 3268 (0.095%) were
81 comes after palliative surgery for malignant bowel obstruction from peritoneal carcinomatosis from an
82 h malignancy who have symptoms indicative of bowel obstruction, gadolinium-enhanced MR imaging can he
83                                              Bowel obstruction had a benign cause in 19 patients and
84                           Without documented bowel obstruction, however, these children should be obs
85 ere detected in 40 (14%) of 280 cases: small-bowel obstruction in 17 (6%) cases, nonobstructive small
86    Observer 1 correctly characterized benign bowel obstruction in 17 of 19 patients and malignant bow
87    Observer 2 correctly characterized benign bowel obstruction in 18 of 19 patients and malignant bow
88 struction in 18 of 19 patients and malignant bowel obstruction in 26 of 29 patients.
89 struction in 17 of 19 patients and malignant bowel obstruction in 27 of 29 patients.
90                          X-rays demonstrated bowel obstruction in 32 patients with nine false-positiv
91 w of 4,001 cases of OLT revealed 48 cases of bowel obstruction in 44 patients.
92     Liver transplantation was complicated by bowel obstruction in 48 (1.2%) of 4,001 cases.
93 or after emergency surgical intervention for bowel obstruction in elderly DNR patients, with high pos
94 c stenosis (IHPS) is the most common form of bowel obstruction in infancy.
95 presented with severe symptoms suggestive of bowel obstruction in the absence of an occluding lesion.
96          Colonic volvulus is a rare cause of bowel obstruction in the United States and is associated
97 eas transplantation, the occurrence of small bowel obstruction in this setting has received scant att
98 ta showed that operative treatment of simple bowel obstruction increased costs nearly eightfold.
99 es, marginal ulcers, jejunal ischemia, small bowel obstruction, internal hernias, intussusception, an
100                                        Large-bowel obstruction is an abdominal emergency with high mo
101                                        Small-bowel obstruction is an old and common problem.
102                                        Small bowel obstruction is an uncommon complication after panc
103                           The cause of small bowel obstruction is considered as well as new strategie
104                     Confirming partial small bowel obstruction is often a diagnostic challenge.
105                                              Bowel obstruction is one of the main and the clinically
106 n of bowel ischemia, particularly when small bowel obstruction is present.
107 other complication, exploration of suspected bowel obstruction is recommended.
108 terior location at CT in an adult with small-bowel obstruction is significantly associated with volvu
109 formed in patients suspected of having large-bowel obstruction, it may not be sufficient to distingui
110   CT enteroclysis in the evaluation of small bowel obstruction may assist the patient care decision-m
111  after surgical treatment of malignant large bowel obstruction (MBO) and to identify risk factors aff
112 introduced for palliation of malignant large-bowel obstruction (MLBO) more than 20 years ago but rema
113  obstruction (n = 1), and late partial small bowel obstruction (n = 1).
114 ly distended excluded stomach (n = 6), small-bowel obstruction (n = 6), gastric staple line dehiscenc
115 s (n=13), urinary tract calculi (n=6), small-bowel obstruction (n=2), cholelithiasis (n=2), pyeloneph
116 cally proved non-abdominal wall hernia small-bowel obstruction (n=68) or small-bowel volvulus (n=32)
117                 Subsequent symptoms of large bowel obstruction necessitated a left hemicolectomy.
118 red within 6 months of surgery; this case of bowel obstruction occurred in the AAV2-GAD group, was no
119 d for patients with bowel wall thickening or bowel obstruction on CT scan.
120 , as was hospitalization without surgery for bowel obstruction or abdominal-wall hernia (14.2% vs. 8.
121 development of serious complications such as bowel obstruction or bladder perforation.
122 come is presentation with a hernia involving bowel obstruction or gangrene, sepsis, or peritonitis.
123 al condition in patients with possible small bowel obstruction or mesenteric infarction.
124 Patients with refractory disease, history of bowel obstruction, or > two prior anticancer regimens we
125  establishing the diagnosis of partial small bowel obstruction, particularly in the 2 cases in which
126 owever, bevacizumab may increase the risk of bowel obstruction/perforation.
127 r variables: (a) discrete mass and (b) small-bowel obstruction (positive criteria); (c) air or stool
128 ow complication rate and a low rate of small bowel obstruction, provides excellent fecal control, per
129    Research into fibrosis - a cause of pain, bowel obstruction, retroperitoneal vascular constriction
130  of patients with suspected mechanical small-bowel obstruction, revisit the controversy of the short
131 e the frequency of readmissions due to small bowel obstruction (SBO) after open versus laparoscopic s
132 large cohort of patients with adhesive small bowel obstruction (SBO) managed operatively.
133 shed CT signs of IH: mesenteric swirl, small-bowel obstruction (SBO), mushroom sign, clustered loops,
134 ely identify strangulation in adhesive small bowel obstruction (SBO).
135 gn of ischemia complicating mechanical small bowel obstruction (SBO).
136 cations for surgical intervention were small bowel obstruction (seven cases), perforation (six cases)
137  intestinal atresia (MIA) is a rare cause of bowel obstruction that is sometimes associated with a co
138 edian age, 69 years) with adhesive SBO small-bowel obstruction that was initially treated medically w
139  culminate in chemoresistance and ultimately bowel obstruction, the most frequent cause of death.
140                 Four patients had neoplastic bowel obstruction, three due to posttransplantation lymp
141 7%) patients presented with mechanical small bowel obstruction, three of which were secondary to inte
142  serious complications (fistulas, abscesses, bowel obstructions), time between flare-ups, oral steroi
143                       Three donors had small bowel obstructions; two required operation.
144     Forty-eight patients with malignancy and bowel obstruction underwent abdominal and pelvic MR imag
145 e clinical or plain x-ray findings suggested bowel obstruction underwent prospective evaluation by ab
146 operative ileus, deep vein thrombosis, small bowel obstruction, urinary stricture, urine leak, hernia
147             Nonoperative treatment of simple bowel obstruction usually succeeds.
148 ative frequency of other causes differed-eg, bowel obstruction was common after open repair, and graf
149                       Presence or absence of bowel obstruction was determined at laparotomy and by cl
150                                    Malignant bowel obstruction was present in 24 of 25 patients with
151                                    Malignant bowel obstruction was recorded if there was a mass, a di
152              An estimated 3,351,152 cases of bowel obstruction were admitted in the United States ove
153  In addition, patients with cancer and small bowel obstruction were examined as a special subset of p
154                          Patients with acute bowel obstruction were excluded.
155 kening, lymphadenopathy, hydronephrosis, and bowel obstruction were less common associated findings.
156 olon, is the most common cause of congenital bowel obstruction with an incidence of 1 in 5000 live bi
157                    Prompt detection of small bowel obstruction with early surgical intervention can m
158  equally effective in terms of postoperative bowel obstruction, with stapler anastomosis leading to a
159         The primary endpoint was the rate of bowel obstruction within 30 days after ileostomy closure
160 3 (16.6%) in the hand suture group developed bowel obstruction within 30 days postoperatively [odds r
161 ients in this series developed postoperative bowel obstruction, wound complications, or anastomotic l
162                    This is a review of small-bowel obstruction written primarily for residents.

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