The trend in recent years for treatment of pancreatic carcinoma and occasionally for pancreatitis has been towards total pancreatectomy. The pancreas is also now being harvested for transplantation. Any operative technique that can reduce operating time, blood loss, and associated morbidity and mort
Hepatic Resection With an Nd.YAG Laser in Pig
β Scribed by Dr. G. Godlewskis; P. Ginoves; J. M. Chincholles; E. Viel; J. P. Bureau; S. Rouy; H. Mion; A. Dubois; J. Fesquet
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1983
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 637 KB
- Volume
- 3
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0196-8092
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Eleven hepatic resections were performed by means of a divergent Nd:YAG laser. The beam was transmitted through a fiberoptic delivery system without any handpiece. The shortest resection time and most limited ischemic damage (4 mm) were obtained with 80-W power shoots and a low divergent beam (4'2 for full angle). The hemostatic effects of the Nd:YAG controled bleeding from veins of up to 4.5 mm in diameter, and parenchymatic oozing from the cut edge minimized blood loss. Histological examination revealed the importance of cellular deterioration in the ischemic layer, while electron microscopy showed selective destruction of cell organelles and protein denaturation. Marked elevation of hepatic serum enzymes suggests a high degree of cellular damage. Postoperative examinations confirmed an uncomplicated healing process. Finally, the use of a flexible fiberoptic enables easy surgical manipulation.
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The purpose of this __in vitro__ study was to verify through micro tensile bond test the bond strength of an adhesive system irradiated with Nd:YAG laser in dentine previously treated with Er:YAG laser. Twenty caries free extracted human third molars were used. The teeth were divided in four experim
## Abstract Twentyβeight partial nephrectomies were performed on nine pigs with a simultaneous, coaxial CO~2~βNd:YAG laser at power settings of 20 W and 40 W, or with a steel scalpel. A vascular pedicle clamp was used without renal cooling. The time for hemostasis was 4.5 Β± 3.2 min (mean Β± SD) with