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1 al knee arthroplasty to 96% for laparoscopic cholecystectomy).
2 ng surgical treatment (open vs. laparoscopic cholecystectomy).
3 ecystolithiasis reports persisting pain post-cholecystectomy.
4 imaging of biliary anatomy towards precision cholecystectomy.
5 ould provide outcomes comparable to extended cholecystectomy.
6     The majority, 88.8% (6060), had a simple cholecystectomy.
7 es, positive resection margins, and extended cholecystectomy.
8 -day readmissions for inpatient laparoscopic cholecystectomy.
9 erative cholangiography (IOC) during robotic cholecystectomy.
10 ssociations are not due to detection bias or cholecystectomy.
11  are discovered incidentally at laparoscopic cholecystectomy.
12 hospitals in inpatient Medicare laparoscopic cholecystectomy.
13 an controls undergoing elective laparoscopic cholecystectomy.
14 rely occur during the course of laparoscopic cholecystectomy.
15 epair of bile duct injuries sustained during cholecystectomy.
16 al, partial, insufficient or incomplete, and cholecystectomy.
17 ng entrustment decisions during laparoscopic cholecystectomy.
18 cystitis in patients undergoing laparoscopic cholecystectomy.
19  >40%, particularly in those with FD/IBS pre-cholecystectomy.
20 male patients who are in need of an elective cholecystectomy.
21 equiring operative repair within 6 months of cholecystectomy.
22 ith a shorter operation time for laparoscopy cholecystectomy.
23 ation was an omental vessel bleed after a TV cholecystectomy.
24 h groups then performed another laparoscopic cholecystectomy.
25 stectomy and/or ERCP/ES in cases of previous cholecystectomy.
26 nce of and consider risk factors for iGBC at cholecystectomy.
27 ity of surgical care for patients undergoing cholecystectomy.
28 nts with increased comorbidities compared to cholecystectomy.
29 e strategy against common duct injury during cholecystectomy.
30 al episode of gallstone pancreatitis receive cholecystectomy.
31 current gallstone cholangitis and a previous cholecystectomy.
32  common serious complication of laparoscopic cholecystectomy.
33 es demonstrating a stronger association with cholecystectomy.
34 or complications may be increased with early cholecystectomy.
35 nd intraoperative events during laparoscopic cholecystectomy.
36 on measures for laparoscopic appendectomy or cholecystectomy.
37 ective operations: (1) hernia repair, or (2) cholecystectomy.
38 emination and bile spillage during the index cholecystectomy.
39 rlier that was performed in conjunction with cholecystectomy.
40 %), there was bile spillage during the index cholecystectomy.
41 01) when compared to patients who did have a cholecystectomy.
42 o be between 4 and 8 weeks after the initial cholecystectomy.
43 rogram and performed 270 of 288 laparoscopic cholecystectomies.
44  0.021), and fourth (P = 0.023) laparoscopic cholecystectomies.
45 t reconstruction, 0.5% and 0.3% after 57,750 cholecystectomy, 0.6% and 0.5% after 60,681 hernia, and
46 ctal cancer resection (3.37; 2.23-5.09), and cholecystectomy (1.67; 1.27-2.19) (P < .05 for each), bu
47 e most common procedures in both groups were cholecystectomy (10.5%), hip arthroplasty (10.5%), spine
48  access and 151,867 for non-critical access; cholecystectomy, 10,556 for critical access and 573,435
49 verall complication rate is 6.1% in elective cholecystectomy, 11.2% in urgent cholecystectomy, and 12
50 ant differences were observed in terms, open cholecystectomy (15% vs 14%, RR=1.07, 95% CI: 0.99-1.16)
51 minal surgery, including appendectomy (23%), cholecystectomy (16.4%), and hysterectomy (8.2%).
52 r following emergency compared with interval cholecystectomy (17.7 d vs. 13 d, P < 0.001).
53 scopic appendectomy (35.2%) and laparoscopic cholecystectomy (19.3%) were the most common procedures.
54 ch procedure (RYGB 2.1% vs. 1.5%, P < 0.001; cholecystectomy 2.2% vs. 0.65%, P < 0.001; partial colec
55 al performance standard for the laparoscopic cholecystectomy, (2) assess the classification accuracy
56                             For laparoscopic cholecystectomy, 23 ratings are needed to achieve reprod
57  of 102 TV NOTES procedures, including 72 TV cholecystectomies, 24 TV appendectomies, and 6 TV ventra
58                Of 92,932 patients undergoing cholecystectomy, 37,533 (40.4%) underwent concurrent int
59 P/ES) in patients who had undergone previous cholecystectomy; 4 patients refused surgery.
60   Of all patients, 56.8% was pain-free after cholecystectomy, 40.7% of FD/IBS-group vs. 64.4% of no F
61 operations performed, the 5 most common were cholecystectomy (48.5%), appendectomy (16.2%), groin her
62  fracture reduction (63% to 68%, P < 0.001), cholecystectomy (54% to 63%, P < 0.001), and pyloromyoto
63                                         Post-cholecystectomy, 6.1% of patients fulfilled criteria for
64 than in the liver transplantation (63.4%) or cholecystectomy (61.1%) groups (P = .017).
65 opic meniscal repair [116 749]; laparoscopic cholecystectomy [82 372]; hysterectomy [67 452]; total k
66 ), bariatric (10.5%), mastectomy (9.7%), and cholecystectomy (9.0%).
67 mplete episode expenditures for laparoscopic cholecystectomy, a common and lower-risk operation, to c
68 mple (12.4 months) or extended (10.7 months) cholecystectomy alone (all log-rank P<0.001).
69 ideo laparo cholecystectomies (VLCs), 2 open cholecystectomies and 4 endoscopic retrograde cholangiop
70                                          All cholecystectomies and cases of GBC in Alberta, Canada, f
71 hs for patients with chronic pancreatitis or cholecystectomy and at 4-6 months for patients who recei
72                                              Cholecystectomy and Bassini's repair of the inguinal her
73 hree studies report the relationship between cholecystectomy and CVD with a pooled HR of 1.41 (95%CI:
74 s in the probability of undergoing immediate cholecystectomy and disparities in receiving immediate c
75 le to the operative setting for laparoscopic cholecystectomy and endoscopy.
76 ting room for the procedures of laparoscopic cholecystectomy and endoscopy.
77 ed conservatively, followed by elective open cholecystectomy and excision of the fistula tract.
78 able cost of serious SSIs increased for both cholecystectomy and hernia repair as the quantile of tot
79 51 years; age range, 18-84 years) undergoing cholecystectomy and placed inside 120-mL vials containin
80 lop evidenced-based recommendations for safe cholecystectomy and prevention of BDI.
81 s of commonly performed ablative treatments (cholecystectomy and sphincterotomy) are not uniformly go
82 pancreatitis could be treated with empirical cholecystectomy and/or ERCP/ES in cases of previous chol
83 tment presentation on index admission (early cholecystectomy) and those whose cholecystectomy was del
84 ctomies, 5608 colorectal cancers (CRCs) 6608 cholecystectomies, and 41,055 patient deaths.
85 cceptable complications associated with open cholecystectomies, and nearly 50% of the nomadic populat
86 resection, 0.085 in gastric bypass, 0.072 in cholecystectomy, and 0.060 in inguinal hernia repair.
87 in elective cholecystectomy, 11.2% in urgent cholecystectomy, and 12.0% following ERCP.
88 uded previous intervention for renal stones, cholecystectomy, and cardiovascular and respiratory como
89 sis included urgent/emergent admission, open cholecystectomy, and complicated gallstone disease (each
90 ated patients with congestive heart failure, cholecystectomy, and lower percent of clopidogrel-treate
91 paring them with patients who underwent open cholecystectomy, and measured the indicators of technica
92 ecystectomy, patients who had died without a cholecystectomy, and those undergoing cholecystectomy fo
93       Adult patients undergoing laparoscopic cholecystectomy, appendectomy, and inguinal/femoral hern
94 hat are performed open or MIS were selected: cholecystectomy, appendectomy, colectomy, antireflux, an
95                            On average 60% of cholecystectomies are done laparoscopically in urban sur
96 o determine if screen-detected gallstones or cholecystectomy are associated with occurrence of gastro
97                        Hence, gallstones and cholecystectomy are associated with the risk of cancers
98                       Patients who underwent cholecystectomy as a first step had a significantly shor
99  Laparoscopic cholecystectomy surpassed open cholecystectomy as the primary method for gallbladder re
100 mergent gallstone-related hospitalization or cholecystectomy at 2 years.
101 ; of these, 6.8% had gallstones and 3.2% had cholecystectomy at baseline.
102 ctomy and disparities in receiving immediate cholecystectomy before and after Massachusetts health re
103 sed to identify HTx recipients who underwent cholecystectomy between 1998 and 2008.
104 operation preformed-laparoscopic versus open cholecystectomy, between January, 2005, and September, 2
105                 Endoscopic treatment of post-cholecystectomy biliary strictures (PCBS) with multiple
106 , Ninth Revision (ICD-9) codes: laparoscopic cholecystectomy, biliary tract disorders, pneumonia, and
107                                          For cholecystectomy, both the needlescopic cholecystectomy (
108 ospective cohort study of persons undergoing cholecystectomy, breast-conserving surgery, anterior cru
109  surgery in patients with gallstones reduces cholecystectomies, but the impact on overall costs and c
110 for AC and reduced disparities in undergoing cholecystectomy by insurance status and patient race.
111 ncidence of iGBC was 0.19% (n = 170) for all cholecystectomy cases, but 0.05% at LC, 0.60% at LC conv
112 going common outpatient surgical procedures (cholecystectomy, cataract surgery, meniscectomy, muscle/
113                                    In 38,864 cholecystectomies, CBDSs were found in 3969 patients, of
114                           BACKGROUND & AIMS: Cholecystectomy (CCY) after an episode of choledocholith
115                                   Retrograde cholecystectomy, closure of cholecystoduodenal fistula a
116 ents with pancreatic resection, laparoscopic cholecystectomy, colectomy, and appendectomy.
117 mediate risk of a common duct stone, initial cholecystectomy compared with sequential common duct end
118 comes of patients who underwent laparoscopic cholecystectomy, comparing them with patients who underw
119                                              Cholecystectomy complications carry significant morbidit
120 at reduce the risk and aid in recognition of cholecystectomy complications, as well as advance suppor
121  patients and 13 lean individuals undergoing cholecystectomy (controls), analyzed by flow cytometry,
122                              By 2013, 62% of cholecystectomies countrywide were done laparoscopically
123 l cancer risk associated with gallstones and cholecystectomy decreased with increasing distance from
124 8 key questions across 6 broad topics around cholecystectomy directed by a steering group and subject
125 ced to a rare complication of a laparoscopic cholecystectomy due to a gallbladder empyema.
126 d for 19926 women undergoing appendectomy or cholecystectomy during pregnancy and a scoring system fo
127  obstetrical outcomes after appendectomy and cholecystectomy during pregnancy and stratify the risk o
128  obstetrical outcomes after appendectomy and cholecystectomy during pregnancy is necessary for eviden
129 e obstetrical outcomes after appendectomy or cholecystectomy during pregnancy.
130             Of 477 patients that underwent a cholecystectomy during the study period, 355 (74.9%) wer
131 e cholangiopancreatography with laparoscopic cholecystectomy (ERCP+LC) vs laparoscopic common bile du
132                                              Cholecystectomy first with intraoperative cholangiogram
133                              Index emergency cholecystectomy following acute cholecystitis is widely
134 cystectomy" where they had never undergone a cholecystectomy following discharge, or "cholecystectomy
135 r 50% of patients in England did not undergo cholecystectomy following index admission for acute chol
136 the differences between patients who undergo cholecystectomy following index admission for cholecysti
137 ncreased probability of undergoing immediate cholecystectomy for AC and reduced disparities in underg
138 Randomized trials comparing early to delayed cholecystectomy for acute cholecystitis have limited con
139 e charts of patients undergoing laparoscopic cholecystectomy for acute cholecystitis in a primary car
140 age-point increased probability of immediate cholecystectomy for all GS/SP patients in MA (P = 0.049)
141 0% of GBCs are discovered incidentally after cholecystectomy for benign pathology.
142   The first patient underwent a laparoscopic cholecystectomy for gallbladder empyema and died from se
143      Fifty-eight patients were scheduled for cholecystectomy for gallbladder lithiasis.
144 hout a cholecystectomy, and those undergoing cholecystectomy for malignancy, pancreatitis, or choledo
145 lts support the benefit of early overdelayed cholecystectomy for patients with acute cholecystitis.
146 urrent guidelines recommend extended/radical cholecystectomy for T2/T3 gallbladder cancer; however, m
147 on duct assessment and clearance followed by cholecystectomy for the control group.
148 secutive patients with gallstones undergoing cholecystectomy from 2007-2011 were included prospective
149 13 patients undergoing elective laparoscopic cholecystectomy from 2012 to 2015 using data from Medica
150 und on intraoperative cholangiography during cholecystectomy from May 1, 2005, through December 31, 2
151           One-third of patients eligible for cholecystectomy fulfil criteria for FD/IBS.
152 time intervals from the date of the original cholecystectomy: group A: less than 4 weeks (25 patients
153 ing was used to match emergency and interval cholecystectomy groups.
154                  On Bayesian analysis, early cholecystectomy has a 99% probability of reducing 30-day
155                                    Immediate cholecystectomy has been shown to be the optimal treatme
156 ered GBC, bile spillage at the time of index cholecystectomy has measureable adverse consequences on
157 mited country, the expansion of laparoscopic cholecystectomy has transformed the care of biliary trac
158                 The benefits of laparoscopic cholecystectomy have been largely unavailable to most pe
159 tors and with widespread use of laparoscopic cholecystectomy, hepatobiliary malignancies, including i
160 spective case series of 4 surgical patients (cholecystectomy, hernia repair, gastric bypass, and hyst
161 ure [RYGB hazard ratio (HR) 1.24, P < 0.001; cholecystectomy HR 1.89, P < 0.001; partial colectomy HR
162 nts (HR, 2.55; 95% CI, 1.38-4.71), including cholecystectomy (HR, 2.69; 95% CI, 1.29-5.60).
163 ts who underwent nonbariatric surgery (i.e., cholecystectomy, hysterectomy).
164                                              Cholecystectomy impacted the global metabolomics respons
165 icipants performed 5 sequential laparoscopic cholecystectomies in the OR.
166 t lower (P < 0.001) probability of immediate cholecystectomy in both MA control states.
167 nd predictors of in-hospital mortality after cholecystectomy in heart transplant (HTx) recipients.
168              The decision regarding elective cholecystectomy in older patients with symptomatic chole
169       We need to clarify the indications for cholecystectomy in patients with Functional Gallbladder
170 rates comparable to those reported for total cholecystectomy in simple cases.
171         Both groups performed a laparoscopic cholecystectomy in the OR that was video-recorded.
172 l MRI performed two years after laparoscopic cholecystectomy, in a patient with only a mild right-sid
173 7), and 63.84% and 59.41% of operations were cholecystectomy, in the clopidogrel and nonclopidogrel g
174 nd untargeted metabolomics to assess whether cholecystectomy influenced plasma and fecal BAs fluctuat
175 sidents in their final 6 months of training (cholecystectomy, inguinal/femoral hernia repair, appende
176 majority of patients undergoing laparoscopic cholecystectomy, IOUS is cost-effective relative to IOC
177                      Bile duct injury during cholecystectomy is a serious complication that often req
178                                     Subtotal cholecystectomy is an important tool for use in difficul
179                         Abdominal pain after cholecystectomy is common and may be attributed to sphin
180 ares to a HR of 1.30 (95%CI: 1.07-1.58) when cholecystectomy is excluded although confounding may inf
181 considered during initial hospitalization if cholecystectomy is not done.
182 rly defined despite the frequency with which cholecystectomy is performed.
183 ed mild gallstone pancreatitis in whom early cholecystectomy is safe warrants further investigation.
184                                              Cholecystectomy is the only procedure for which MIS was
185  clinically silent CBD stones during routine cholecystectomy is unclear.
186  bile duct stones (CBDSs) encountered during cholecystectomy is yet to be determined.
187 res (ie, varicose vein removal, laparoscopic cholecystectomy, laparoscopic appendectomy, hemorrhoidec
188 open cholecystectomy (SIOC) and laparoscopic cholecystectomy (LC) concerning costs and health-related
189  validated virtual reality (VR) laparoscopic cholecystectomy (LC) curriculum.
190  in support of performing early laparoscopic cholecystectomy (LC) for acute cholecystitis.
191 utcomes of early versus delayed laparoscopic cholecystectomy (LC) in acute cholecystitis with more th
192 el lymph node biopsy (PM SLNB), laparoscopic cholecystectomy (LC), laparoscopic inguinal hernia repai
193 dder malignancy who underwent a laparoscopic cholecystectomy (LC; n = 80,924) or open cholecystectomy
194 mmon bile duct exploration with laparoscopic cholecystectomy (LCBDE+LC).
195  trial was to ascertain whether laparoscopic cholecystectomy (LCC) can prevent recurrent attacks of i
196                                   Therefore, cholecystectomy may act as a bias in assessments of the
197                               Gallstones and cholecystectomy may be related to digestive system cance
198          Increasing the numbers of emergency cholecystectomy may risk over-treating patients with acu
199 spital length of stay was shorter with early cholecystectomy (mean difference 1.9 days, 95% CI: 1.7-2
200 al pain and gallstones (assumed eligible for cholecystectomy), mean age 52 years, 76% females.
201                                              Cholecystectomy modifies the kinetics of BAs, and whethe
202 y matched with 4 other elective laparoscopic cholecystectomies (n = 8312) performed by the same surge
203                             For laparoscopic cholecystectomy (n = 10 studies) and endoscopy (n = 10 s
204  used to identify all patients who underwent cholecystectomy (N = 91,260).
205   For cholecystectomy, both the needlescopic cholecystectomy (NC) 3-trocar technique using 2 to 3 mm
206 s well as reduced cost compared with delayed cholecystectomy (NCT01548339).
207 pic cholecystectomy (LC; n = 80,924) or open cholecystectomy (OC; n = 10,336) alone were included.
208 rge enough to assess the impact of timing of cholecystectomy on the frequency of serious rare complic
209 esearch is needed to assess the influence of cholecystectomy on this association.
210             Surgeries included: laparoscopic cholecystectomy, open inguinal hernia repair, laparoscop
211 ed partial colectomy, small-bowel resection, cholecystectomy, operative management of peptic ulcer di
212  CI, 0.20-0.40; P < 0.001), and laparoscopic cholecystectomy (OR 0.37, 95% CI, 0.32-0.43; P < 0.001)
213 total or partial thyroidectomy, laparoscopic cholecystectomy, or laparoscopic appendectomy in either
214 geon's database containing 5739 laparoscopic cholecystectomy over 28 years and analysed.
215 al with acute cholecystitis and managed with cholecystectomy over the period of April 1, 2004, to Mar
216 y, gastrostomy/jejunostomy, orchidopexy, and cholecystectomy (P < .05) but not lung resection (P = .7
217 ed 9 fecal and 3 plasma BAs in patients with cholecystectomy (p <= 0.05).
218 er than sham treatment in patients with post-cholecystectomy pain and little or no objective abnormal
219 o underwent Roux-en-Y gastric bypass (RYGB), cholecystectomy, partial colectomy, appendectomy, and hy
220 fteen open herniorrhaphy and 26 laparoscopic cholecystectomy patients had attempted telehealth follow
221 ets, patients who had previously undergone a cholecystectomy, patients who had died without a cholecy
222 divided into three subgroups: patients after cholecystectomy, patients with cholecystolithiasis and p
223     Analyses were performed for laparoscopic cholecystectomy performances alone and for all operative
224 eristics, the odds of common duct injury for cholecystectomies performed without intraoperative chola
225                                 Laparoscopic cholecystectomy performed within 2 days of presentation
226 l variable analysis, the association between cholecystectomy performed without intraoperative cholang
227 y performed procedures included laparoscopic cholecystectomy (PFS, 30.3-43.5), upper gastrointestinal
228 te ligament repair, humerus fracture repair, cholecystectomy, posterior spinal fusion, and tonsillect
229 strictive strategy significantly reduced the cholecystectomy rate with 7.7% and reduced surgical cost
230                                              Cholecystectomy-related claims are costly and time-consu
231 om 1995 to 2015 were reviewed to isolate 745 cholecystectomy-related claims.
232 ith conservative therapy, avoiding high-risk cholecystectomy, resulted in a successful liver transpla
233 omparisons between patients with and without cholecystectomy revealed different concentrations of 4 f
234         A restrictive selection strategy for cholecystectomy saves &OV0556;162 compared to usual care
235                                     Subtotal cholecystectomy (SC) is a procedure that removes portion
236         By affecting the BAs concentrations, cholecystectomy seems to alter the systemic metabolic re
237  disparities in the probability of immediate cholecystectomy seen before health care reform were no l
238                                        Early cholecystectomy shortly after admission for mild gallsto
239 gic examination of her gallbladder following cholecystectomy showed signs of chronic cholecystitis.
240 stones on ultrasound at 24 months, number of cholecystectomies, side-effects of UDCA and quality of l
241      We aimed to compare small-incision open cholecystectomy (SIOC) and laparoscopic cholecystectomy
242 rsus antibiotic therapy and Delayed elective Cholecystectomy") study is a randomized, prospective, op
243 king no measures when CBDSs are found during cholecystectomy suggest that the natural course might no
244                                 Laparoscopic cholecystectomy surpassed open cholecystectomy as the pr
245 orsened and underwent distal gastrectomy and cholecystectomy that included removing the bleeding aneu
246 e a cholecystectomy following discharge, or "cholecystectomy." The latter group was then subdivided a
247  of the transition from open to laparoscopic cholecystectomy throughout Mongolia.
248 by operation: from 75 cases over 2 years for cholecystectomy to 7 cases for umbilical hernia repair.
249 ssociation of time interval from the initial cholecystectomy to reoperation with overall survival.
250               Time interval from the initial cholecystectomy to reoperation: group A: less than 4 wee
251                                 Transvaginal cholecystectomy (TVC) is the leading natural orifice tra
252 cars and the umbilical-assisted transvaginal cholecystectomy (TVC) technique have found their way int
253        In patients with abdominal pain after cholecystectomy undergoing ERCP with manometry, sphincte
254 al Surgery residents performing laparoscopic cholecystectomies using the Objective Structured Assessm
255            Episode payments for laparoscopic cholecystectomy vary widely across surgeons.
256 , oesophagectomy, colectomy, pancreatectomy, cholecystectomy, ventral hernia repair, craniotomy, hip
257 estion, we leveraged a large-scale, diverse, cholecystectomy video dataset.
258          One thousand fifty-one laparoscopic cholecystectomy videos were annotated by AI for disease
259  attendings) reviewed simulated laparoscopic cholecystectomy videos, determined the next safest opera
260 cal assessment, we performed 10 video laparo cholecystectomies (VLCs), 2 open cholecystectomies and 4
261     The mean operation time for laparoscopic cholecystectomy was 10% shorter for the patients with st
262                                        Early cholecystectomy was associated with a lower risk of majo
263 sion (early cholecystectomy) and those whose cholecystectomy was delayed.
264 bdivided as "emergency cholecystectomy" when cholecystectomy was performed during their index emergen
265                                          MIS cholecystectomy was performed with low variation; MIS ap
266 ission, or "interval cholecystectomy" when a cholecystectomy was performed within 12 months following
267                                              Cholecystectomy was performed, preserving adjacent organ
268 wRVUs (wRVUs, 491.0-618.2), and laparoscopic cholecystectomy was regularly the next highest (wRVUs, 3
269                                     Subtotal cholecystectomy was typically performed using the laparo
270                                Nearly 16 000 cholecystectomies were analysed and compared (4417 [28.2
271                                         Open cholecystectomies were associated with high rates of wou
272                          In 2005, only 2% of cholecystectomies were being done laparoscopically.
273 hrough a SILS port in the vagina, whereas TV cholecystectomies were hybrid procedures with the additi
274 total, 94,183 eligible elective laparoscopic cholecystectomies were performed between 2004 and 2011.
275                              In all, 115,484 cholecystectomies were performed, and a detailed analysi
276                       Patients scheduled for cholecystectomy were assigned to undergo LC or SIOC perf
277                               Gallstones and cholecystectomy were associated with increased risk of n
278  available data on the date of their initial cholecystectomy were included.
279 atients undergoing standardized laparoscopic cholecystectomy were randomized to separated active elec
280 heir index emergency admission, or "interval cholecystectomy" when a cholecystectomy was performed wi
281 tter group was then subdivided as "emergency cholecystectomy" when cholecystectomy was performed duri
282          Patients were grouped as either "no cholecystectomy" where they had never undergone a cholec
283 olic is reported by only a few patients post-cholecystectomy, whereas non-biliary abdominal pain pers
284 omy with adjuvant therapy (23.3 months) than cholecystectomy with adjuvant therapy (16.4 months), whi
285 rvival was significantly longer for extended cholecystectomy with adjuvant therapy (23.3 months) than
286                                       Simple cholecystectomy with adjuvant therapy appears to be supe
287                          To assess if simple cholecystectomy with adjuvant therapy could provide outc
288 postcholecystectomy mortality, completion of cholecystectomy with an open approach, conversion among
289 ld gallstone pancreatitis were randomized to cholecystectomy with cholangiogram within 24 hours of pr
290  stone extraction alone (ES), enterotomy and cholecystectomy with fistula closure (EF), bowel resecti
291     If these findings are confirmed, initial cholecystectomy with intraoperative cholangiogram may be
292 antile of total costs increased ($38,410 for cholecystectomy with serious SSI vs no SSI at the 70th p
293         Men and women underwent laparoscopic cholecystectomy with the same frequency (41.2% men, 43.2
294 iteria for biliary colic and 74.9% underwent cholecystectomy, with similar operation rates in patient
295 lecystitis, 51.1% (47,626) did not undergo a cholecystectomy within 1 year of index admission.
296  did not undergo hospitalization or elective cholecystectomy within 2.5 months of the episode.
297  with predicted mild gallstone pancreatitis, cholecystectomy within 24 hours of admission reduced rat
298                         We hypothesized that cholecystectomy within 24 hours of admission versus afte
299  into 2 exposure groups: those who underwent cholecystectomy within 7 days of emergency department pr
300 trial involving 214 patients with pain after cholecystectomy without significant abnormalities on ima

 
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