Cathy and Kath...(# 1.) and (# 2.) are not identical articles...

From: Helen Dynda (olddad66@runestone.net)
Thu Nov 7 20:39:44 2002


Cathy (anonymous@medispecialty.com) and Kath (klfindlay@yahoo.co.uk)

If you go to the websites for (# 1.) and (# 2.), you will discover that these 2 websites are not the same article.

Thank you Cathy for posting "Intra-abdominal Adhesions and their Medico-legal Consequences" on the IAS MB!!

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(# 1.) (HTMLversion) Intra-abdominal Adhesions and their Medico-legal Consequences

http://www.google.com/search?q=cache:5VI6Shgq3PUC:www.frist.org/asit/meetings/yearbook2001/INTRA%2520ABDOMINAL.pdf+laparoscopy+morbidity+mortality+adhesions&hl=en&ie=UTF-8

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(# 1.) (pdf version) Intra-abdominal Adhesions and their Medico-legal Consequences (This Url needs to be entered on the address-line of your computer)

http://www.frist.org/asit/meetings/yearbook2001/INTRA ABDOMINAL.pdf

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(# 2.) UK Doctors Warned about Post-Op Adhesions

http://www.trustmed.com.tw/news/2001/07/11/20010711001e.html

" LONDON, July 09, 2001 (Reuters Health) - Doctors in the UK have been warned that they need to be more aware that patients with abdominal pain who have recently undergone surgery may have a potentially dangerous tissue adhesion.

" The caution comes from a senior surgeon. Professor Harold Ellis, from Guy's Hospital, London, found the surgical complications are a growing source of litigation.

"Surgeons, gynaecologists and GPs [general practitioners] must be alert to the possibility that obstructive symptoms early and late after abdominal surgery are likely to be caused by adhesions," Ellis writes in the July issue of the Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine.


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