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A Monthly Journal Devoted To The Art And Science Of Surgery. For over 85 years, Surgery has published practical, authoritative information about procedures, clinical advances, and major trends shaping general surgery. Our mission is to be the premier outlet for high-impact research in surgery.
The journal Surgery invites concise, original articles of new matter in the broad field of clinical and experimental surgery as well as surgical organization, research in global surgery and surgical history.
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Cancer recurrence and survival among patients who underwent neoadjuvant treatment and surgery for esophageal cancer: A single-institution 10-year experience. Andres Ramos-Fresnedo, Amanda L. Phillips, Michael C. Cantrell, Erin M. Mobley, Ziad T. Awad
General Surgery, Colorectal Surgery, Gastrointestinal Surgery Bio: Gaetano Gallo is an Assistant Professor at the University of Siena, Italy. He has a clinical and academic interest in Proctology (Haemorrhoidal Disease, Perianal and Rectovaginal Fistulas, Rectal Prolapse), Functional and Pelvic Floor Disorders, and Microbiome and Colorectal Cancer.
Gender-affirmation surgery decreases rates of gender dysphoria, depression, and suicidality, and significantly improves quality-of-life measures. Data regarding facial gender-affirming surgery are limited. There are very few patient-reported outcome measures specific to gender-affirmation surgery.
The most common surgical skills tested were laparoscopy (n = 283, from 8 studies) and robotic surgery (n = 199, from 5 studies). A history of gaming and video-game–based training were associated with improved metrics in robotic surgery and laparoscopy, respectively.
The difference was most pronounced in plastic surgery (133 vs 111 minutes), urology (104 vs 85 minutes), and gynecology (116 vs 102 minutes). Vascular surgery was the only specialty with shorter operative times for obese patients (106 vs 109 minutes).
Over decades, there has been little progress in reducing incidence and mortality of postoperative aspiration pneumonia. Here, we assessed risk factors for postoperative aspiration pneumonia in general and abdominal surgery patients.
The real incidence of retracted articles in the field of surgery may be elusive. In our study, we selected a sample of 100 surgery journals and assessed the overall number of articles published and the number of articles retracted from those journals for 25 years (1991 to 2016).