Displaying publications 1 - 20 of 151 in total

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  1. Diong KI
    Family Practitioner, 1979;3:26-29.
    Matched MeSH terms: Foreign Bodies
  2. Chidambaram S
    Family Physician, 1991;3:52-54.
    Matched MeSH terms: Foreign Bodies
  3. Lal M
    Med J Malaysia, 1975 Jun;29(4):309-10.
    PMID: 1196180
    Matched MeSH terms: Foreign Bodies*
  4. Khajotia R, Kew ST
    Ear Nose Throat J, 2013 Sep;92(9):E33.
    PMID: 24057915
    Matched MeSH terms: Foreign Bodies/diagnosis*; Foreign Bodies/surgery*
  5. Aung T, Lei CC
    Med J Malaysia, 1995 Jun;50(2):200-1.
    PMID: 7565201
    Matched MeSH terms: Foreign Bodies/radiography; Foreign Bodies/surgery*
  6. Loganathan K, Chacko JP, Saravanan BS, Vaithilingam B
    J Oral Biol Craniofac Res, 2012 Sep-Dec;2(3):210-2.
    PMID: 25737868 DOI: 10.1016/j.jobcr.2012.10.011
    Even though variety of foreign bodies has been reported in a various locations in the craniofacial region, wooden foreign bodies are uncommon. Appropriate management of wooden foreign bodies is considered essential because of their infectious complications and difficulty in radiographic localization. Even though literature is replete with articles on management of foreign bodies in the craniofacial region, specific management of wooden foreign bodies are rarely reported. The purpose of this article is to report two cases of deeply placed wooden foreign body and a protocol for managing them in the maxillofacial region.
    Matched MeSH terms: Eye Foreign Bodies
  7. Shashinder S, Tang IP, Velayutham P, Rahmat O, Loganathan A
    Med J Malaysia, 2008 Aug;63(3):267-8.
    PMID: 19248709 MyJurnal
    A 12-year-old boy with moderate to severe bilateral mixed hearing loss was planned for hearing aid placement. During the process of making ear mould impression, the impression material accidentally entered the right middle ear. Removal of the ear mould impression was possible permeatally under general anaesthesia.
    Matched MeSH terms: Foreign Bodies/diagnosis; Foreign Bodies/etiology*; Foreign Bodies/surgery
  8. Lee, C.K., Sara Ahmad, T., Abdullah, B.J.J.
    Malays Orthop J, 2008;2(2):47-49.
    MyJurnal
    Splinter or foreign body removal from the hand and foot is a common occurrence. Usually only the deep seated, broken or missed splinters are referred to the surgeon for removal. Unless the object is radio-opaque, plain radiograph will not give any useful information, hence removal can sometimes be very difficult and traumatic. We are reporting a case where a radiolucent splinter was removed with the aid of ultrasonography. This modality can help to localize a splinter at the pre and intra-operative period, minimizing amount of exploration and time of operation.
    Matched MeSH terms: Foreign Bodies
  9. Krishnan R
    Family Physician, 1990;2:55-59.
    Matched MeSH terms: Foreign Bodies
  10. Abdul Wahab A
    Br Med J, 1955;2:439.
    I would like to report the case of a Chinese boy of 5 years old who came to see me with a ball-bearing in one of his ears. Repeated attempts were made to extricate it under general anaesthesia by means of several kinds of aural apparatus, but they all failed. While about to give up hope and hand him over to a specialist, I managed to borrow a pair of magnetic forceps from a radio mechanic. The ball-bearing was immediately attracted to the point of the forceps and drawn out with ease. It would not be a bad idea to design a magnetic aural (or nasal) forceps based upon the above principles with a view to avoiding unnecessary pain and misery to the young victims.
    Matched MeSH terms: Foreign Bodies
  11. Revadi G, Philip R, Gurdeep S
    Med J Malaysia, 2010 Jun;65(2):143-5.
    PMID: 23756800 MyJurnal
    A total of 36 patients with suspected foreign body (FB) of the oesophagus who underwent rigid endoscopy under general anaesthesia (GA) from January 2005 to March 2007 were reviewed. The majority of the patients were working adults in the 3rd to 5th decade of life. There was no foreign body in 33.3% of the patients. Co-morbidities were present in 33.3%. Morbidity and mortality from the procedure included one aspiration pneumonia, one lateral pharyngeal wall tear and one death (8.3%). X-ray findings were negative or inconclusive in 11(45.8%) patients with a foreign body. The majority of patients, 85.7% required 2 to 3 days of admission of which 52.7% had no foreign bodies. The most common foreign body retrieved was fishbone accounting for 13 of the 24 foreign bodies detected.
    Matched MeSH terms: Foreign Bodies*
  12. Samuel D
    Med J Malaysia, 1990 Dec;45(4):335-9.
    PMID: 2152056
    Two cases of longstanding foreign bodies in the larynx and lower laryngo-pharynx were accurately localised by direct coronal3 and limited axial CT scans of the neck. The relationship of the foreign bodies with the surrounding structures and associated changes are demonstrated clearly.
    Matched MeSH terms: Foreign Bodies/radiography*
  13. MCDOUGALL C
    Med J Malaya, 1955 Jun;9(4):276-80.
    PMID: 13253127
    Matched MeSH terms: Foreign Bodies*
  14. Harvinder S, Jenny L, Gurdeep S
    Med J Malaysia, 2008 Oct;63(4):333-4.
    PMID: 19385497
    We experienced the case of a patient who had a foreign body in the maxillary sinus. The foreign body was an arrow accidentally triggered by the patient while fishing. The foreign body was removed via the Caldwell-Luc approach.
    Matched MeSH terms: Foreign Bodies/radiography; Foreign Bodies/surgery*
  15. Yip CH, Wong TJ, Somasundaram K
    Med J Malaysia, 1988 Jun;43(2):150-4.
    PMID: 3237130
    From 1973 to 1982,40 children with respiratory distress was bronchoscoped for suspected foreign body in the trachea-bronchial tree. In 31 children, foreign bodies were found and were successfully removed. The condition appeared to be confined to the early toddler group. Six children had pulmonary complications post-operatively. There was no death. A plea is made for early diagnosis and referral to lessen the likelihood of residual pulmonary damage.
    Study site: University Hospital, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia (current name: University Malaya Medical Centre)
    Matched MeSH terms: Foreign Bodies/diagnosis*; Foreign Bodies/radiography
  16. Yeoh NTL
    Med J Malaysia, 1982 Dec;37(4):344-8.
    PMID: 7167087
    Two cases oj dentures impacted in the oesophagus are presented. One patient had an intrathoracic perforation oj the oesophagus. The complications arising from. impacted foreign bodies and attempts at its removal are discussed. It is suggested that primary oesophagostomy and extraction of the foreign. body may be the better alternative than repeated attempts at extraction through the oesophagoscope.
    Matched MeSH terms: Foreign Bodies/radiography*; Foreign Bodies/surgery
  17. Sakijan AS, Zambahari R, Annuar Z, Yahya O, Ali J
    Med J Malaysia, 1990 Dec;45(4):340-3.
    PMID: 2152057
    A successful retrieval of a detached segment of a CVP catheter by percutaneous right transfemoral venous route, using a Dotter intravascular retriever basket, is reported. The procedure was monitored under fluoroscopy. Only local anaesthesia, which was infiltrated around the puncture site, was given to the patient. No significant complication was encountered. Successful retrieval of the detached catheter fragment by percutaneous means obviates the need for thoracotomy.
    Matched MeSH terms: Foreign Bodies/radiography; Foreign Bodies/therapy*
  18. Dutta M, Ghatak S, Biswas G
    Med J Malaysia, 2013 Aug;68(4):368-71.
    PMID: 24145273
    Chronic discharging ear, mostly due to middle or external ear infection, is one of the leading causes for seeking healthcare among the paediatric population in a developing country. However, a long-standing forgotten middle ear foreign body forms a rare cause for such presentation demanding a high index of suspicion from the clinicians. Most of them are iatrogenic or accidental, and are removed by conventional permeatal approach; need for tympanotomy is rarely documented in the recent literature. We report the first case where a large stone was introduced into the middle ear through a pre-existing tympanic membrane perforation by the child himself, and only the second documentation of removal of a middle ear foreign body by tympanotomy in a child.
    Matched MeSH terms: Foreign Bodies/epidemiology
  19. Irfan M
    Med J Malaysia, 2012 Jun;67(3):352.
    PMID: 23082438
    Matched MeSH terms: Foreign Bodies/epidemiology*
  20. Nor MM, Yushar A, Razali M, Rahman RA, Ramli R
    Dentomaxillofac Radiol, 2006 Nov;35(6):473-4.
    PMID: 17082343
    Susuk, or charm needles, are inserted and worn subcutaneously in the face and other parts of the body, as they are believed to enhance beauty and youth, and for many other reasons such as treatment of headache, aches and pains in the joints, back or abdomen. The practice of inserting susuk is a traditional belief, genuinely cultural and superstitious, and common in the south-east Asian region. We present 13 cases of susuk, which was found incidentally on the radiographs as the patients came for various types of treatment at our centre.
    Matched MeSH terms: Foreign Bodies/radiography*
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