There is currently no consensus as to whether an antireflux procedure should accompany surgical repair of paraoesophageal hernia. Forty consecutive patients with paraoesophageal hernia were studied. Surgery routinely included transabdominal hernia reduction, excision of the sac and crural repair. The addition of fundoplication was based on the presence of preoperative endoscopic evidence of oesophagitis. Twenty-three patients without endoscopic oesophagitis had no antireflux procedure whereas 17 with oesophagitis underwent concomitant antireflux surgery. Thirty-six patients were followed for 1-7 years. Patients without endoscopic oesophagitis had no postoperative reflux problems. All patients with oesophagitis who underwent fundoplication were improved or cured of reflux. The selection of patients for antireflux repair can satisfactorily be based on preoperative endoscopic findings.
Understanding the haemostatic changes is crucial in developing strategies for the management of haemorrhage syndroma. In recent years, the revised model of coagulation ("cell based" model) provided a much more authentic description of the coagulation process. Pharmacological intervention, especially desmopresin, antifibrinolytics (synthetics and nature) and increasingly recombinant activated factor VII are being used in prevention and therapeutically to control bleeding of variety etiologies. Skillfull surgery combined with blood saving methods and careful management of blood coagulation will all help in sucessfull haemorrhage prevention and treatment, and reduce unnecessary blood loss and transfusion requirements and its attendant risks. Among the all avalaible tests, the use of thromboelastography has allowed for more detailed dynamic assessment of the various steps of hemostasis.
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