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- BookFarzeen Firoozi, editor.Summary: Female Pelvic Surgery provides a comprehensive, state-of-the-art surgical review of this field and will serve as a valuable resource for clinicians and surgeons. The text reviews the basic indications for treatment and details the many surgical approaches to the management of all pelvic floor disorders. In addition to step-by-step description in text, the volume provides illustrations/photographs of surgical techniques. Integration of surgical methods demonstrating the major repairs described in each section augment the textbook and serve as the tool for the education of clinicians and surgeons. Female Pelvic Surgery provides a concise and comprehensive review of all the surgical approaches to female pelvic surgery and thus it will serve as an extremely useful resource for physicians dealing with and interested in the treatment of pelvic floor disorders.
Contents:
Anatomy of the Female Genitourinary Tract
Instrumentation for Female Pelvic Surgery
Surgical Management of Stress Urinary Incontinence
Sacral Neuromodulation
Transvaginal Prolapse Repair
Obliterative Vaginal Procedures
Open Transabdominal Sacrocolpopexy
Laparoscopic and Robotic Assisted Laparoscopic Sacrocolpopexy
Transvaginal Urethrolysis for Urethral Obstruction
Vaginal Fistula Repairs
Repair of Urethral Diverticula
Augmentation Cystoplasty
Urethroplasty for Female Urethral Stricture
Excision of Vaginal Cysts
Transvaginal Closure of Bladder Neck
Surgical Therapy for Fecal Incontinence
Botulinum Toxin Therapy for Voiding Dysfunction and the Female Pelvic Floor
Construction of the Neovagina. - ArticleHuber A, Zingher E.Helv Chir Acta. 1979 Feb;45(6):723-7.The diverticular disease of the colon is one of the most frequent causes of massive bleeding of the large bowel. The results of emergency operations without localisation of the bleeding are disappointing. The bleeding point can be localised by selective angiography, and this renders possible the most favourable surgical procedure as shown by the case report of a high risk patient.