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WOUND HEALING AFTER ANTERIOR GASTROENTEROSTOMYII. FATE OF MUCOSAL INCLUSIONS AND THEIR PREVENTION; DESCRIPTION OF A NEW SUTURE TECHNIC. AN EXPERIMENTAL STUDY IN DOGS
KARL H. MARTZLOFF, M.D.;
GEORGE R. SUCKOW, M.D.
Arch Surg. 1935;31(1):10-29.
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In a previous experimental study1 we attempted to reproduce serosal inclusions such as are found at times on the female parietal and visceral peritoneum and showed that when two serosal surfaces are brought together as in a gastro-enterostomy no recognizable serosal inclusions (celomic epithelium) are formed. This result was not unexpected in view of the studies of Ranvier and Marchand,2 Cunningham,3 Foot4 and others. However, we believed it possible that such inclusions might have been overlooked when an investigator was engrossed in some other phase of the problem of the behavior of celomic epithelium. As noted, our search in this respect was fruitless.
On the other hand, we did find that when we employed suture methods on the anterior aspect of gastro-intestinal anastomoses that everted mucosa into the line of apposition between stomach and intestine, then mucosal inclusions (appositional rests or inclusions) similar to those shown
. . . [Full Text PDF of this Article]
Author Affiliations
PORTLAND, ORE.
From the Departments of Surgery and Physiology, University of Oregon Medical School.
Footnotes
This work was aided in part by Grant no. 178 from the Committee on Scientific Research, American Medical Association, by a grant to the medical school by the General Education Board.
Our experiments and observations were completed in January 1931, and the substance of this paper was reported at a meeting of the North Pacific Surgical Society, Dec. 3, 1931. Illness has prevented prior publication.
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