The British journal of surgery
-
The reported mortality rate associated with abdominal wounds sustained in war varies considerably because of the heterogeneity of wounds and the different circumstances under which figures have been collected rather than different treatment strategies. This review draws together a personal experience, reports from ten wars, and information from a database for war wounded into an analysis of abdominal wounds. The analysis attempts to bring understanding to why people die with abdominal wounds in war and so clarifies logistic and treatment issues.
-
Clinical desmoid disease affect approximately 10 per cent of patients with familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP); the subclinical rate is unknown. Desmoids are probably neoplastic rather than regenerative in origin and may arise in association with germline or somatic mutations at or beyond codon 1444 of the APC gene. ⋯ Surgical treatment of advanced desmoids is hazardous, but medical treatments have limited success. Chemotherapy with doxorubicin and dacarbazine is currently under evaluation.