Pediatric Surgery

Mohamed Ibrahim
11,820 Views · 10 months ago

A parasitic twin (also known as an asymmetrical or unequal conjoined twin) is the result of the processes that produce vanishing twins and conjoined twins, and may represent a continuum between the two. Parasitic twins occur when a twin embryo begins developing in utero, but the pair does not fully separate, and one embryo maintains dominant development at the expense of the other. Unlike conjoined twins, one ceases development during gestation and is vestigial to a mostly fully-formed, otherwise healthy individual twin. The undeveloped twin is defined as parasitic, rather than conjoined, because it is incompletely formed or wholly dependent on the body functions of the complete fetus. The independent twin is called the autosite.

Alicia Berger
53,908 Views · 10 months ago

Newborn with Bulging Heart outside Thorax

Anatomist
13,686 Views · 10 months ago

Drop Arm Test

Emery King
27,620 Views · 10 months ago

DMC pediatric heart specialist uses less invasive technique to repair a child's Atrial Septal Defect ("Hole in the heart.".) ~ Detroit Medical Center

Emery King
10,347 Views · 10 months ago

After their parents were strongly urged by their local hospital to go to Children's Hospital of Michigan, Dr. Jeffrey Taub controls an aggressive cancer in 2 month old twins. ~ Detroit Medical Center

Emery King
15,292 Views · 10 months ago

A little boy with a mystifying eye condition finally found an answer on the other side of the globe with the help of Dr. Harry Chugani at Children's Hospital of Michigan. ~ Detroit Medical Center

Emery King
11,963 Views · 10 months ago

At Children's Hospital, Dr. Mary Bedard and the NICU nursing staff save the life of a tiny infant struggling from a serious intestinal infection. ~ Detroit Medical Center

Emery King
23,864 Views · 10 months ago

At Hutzel Women's Hospital, Dr. Giancarlo Mari performs breakthrough in-utero surgery to save the lives of high-risk twins developing with a rare "shared" circulatory problem. ~ Detroit Medical Center

Mohamed Ibrahim
14,873 Views · 10 months ago

Conjoined twins Alex and Angel Mendoza from Phoenix, Ariz. were successfully separated after more than 12 hours in surgery, reports Dr. Debbye Turner Bell.

Mohamed Ibrahim
20,426 Views · 10 months ago

While the incidence of most sports-related injuries has been holding steady for the past two decades, injuries to the anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) continue to increase significantly, particularly in female athletes. In fact, on many college teams, as many as 30 to 50 percent of young women have had an ACL injury during their high school careers in certain sports, such as basketball, soccer and gymnastics.
Watch pediatric orthopedic surgeons at Akron Children's Hospital perform arthroscopic surgery to replace a young athlete's ACL

DrPhil
20,315 Views · 10 months ago

Kite flap, Guy Fouchier flap, 2nd finger to thumb. Cadaver dissection. Prof Steven Hovius demonstrates dissection technique and planning for a kite flap.

DrPhil
16,039 Views · 10 months ago

it's a 8 years old boy with previous medical history of Sickle cell disease presented with gall stone and repeat abdominal pain. A laparoscopic cholecystectomy is performed. The cystic duct is controlled with 2 stiches of absorbable suture. The cystic artery is simply cauterized with the hook cauter...y. the specimen is removed through the umbilical port using an 10mm endobag.

DrPhil
12,894 Views · 10 months ago

Laparoscopic treatment for Biliary Atresia. Kasai porto-enterostomy

DrPhil
15,374 Views · 10 months ago

Repair techniques for various types of asymmetric pectus excavatum are illustrated. Morphology-tailored bar shaping and selecting the hinge points are key elements of the technique. Repair of two cases on an eccentric type and unbalanced type according to "Park Classification" was demonstrated.




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