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Featured researches published by Arie L. Durst.


American Journal of Surgery | 1986

Surgical aspects of gastrointestinal persimmon phytobezoar treatment

Michael M. Krausz; Evyatar Z. Moriel; Amram Ayalon; Dov Pode; Arie L. Durst

One hundred thirteen patients presented with gastrointestinal complications due to persimmon phytobezoars during a 3 year period. One hundred three patients had a history of persimmon ingestion. One hundred five patients had undergone previous gastric operation for duodenal ulcer, one patient underwent highly selective vagotomy, and seven patients had not undergone previous operation. An elevated temperature, leukocytosis, and decreased bowel sounds were typical early clinical manifestations of small bowel obstruction by persimmon phytobezoars. In 13 patients, gastric bezoars were found, in 20 patients, gastric and intestinal bezoars, and in 80 patients, intestinal bezoars. One hundred patients were treated surgically. In 14 of the 20 patients with concomitant gastric and intestinal phytobezoars, extraction of the bezoars was achieved by gastrotomy. Of the remaining six patients, it was achieved by intraoperative milking of the gastric bezoar into the small bowel in two patients and by conservative treatment in four patients. Of the 100 patients who presented with small bowel obstruction, 60 were treated by milking of the bezoar into the large bowel, 34 by enterotomy, and 6 by conservative therapy with intravenous fluids, gastric suction, and a water-soluble contrast meal. Small bowel resection of a gangrenous segment was necessary in two patients. Two patients died after operation because of sepsis and respiratory complications. Eleven of the 13 patients in whom postoperative wound infection developed underwent gastrotomy or enterotomy. We conclude that the treatment of choice of intestinal obstruction due to persimmon phytobezoars is milking of the bezoar into the large bowel without enterotomy. Preoperative or operative endoscopy should be performed in patients presenting with complications of gastrointestinal phytobezoars. Patients who have undergone gastric operation should be warned against the risk of persimmon ingestion.


American Journal of Surgery | 1978

Primary neoplasms of the small bowel

Herbert R. Freund; Alexandra Lavi; Reuven Pfeffermann; Arie L. Durst

The treatment of thirty-one malignant and eleven benign neoplasms of the small intestine is reported. The most common symptom was abdominal pain followed by vomiting, diarrhea, weight loss, constipation, and gastrointestinal bleeding. In four cases small bowel perforated. Intestinal obstruction occurred in 31 per cent of patients. Preoperative diagnosis was made in 19 per cent of patients. All eleven patients with benign neoplasms were curatively treated by resection and primary anastomosis. Eighteen of the thirty-one patients with malignant tumors had curative resection, five had palliative resection, and eight had laparotomy and biopsy only. The most common benign tumor was leiomyoma. The most common malignant tumor was lymphoma (67 per cent) followed by adenocarcinoma (16 per cent), carcinoid (10 per cent), and leiomyosarcoma (3 per cent). Twenty-four patients were available for follow up; thirteen remain alive and eleven died, seven within one year and four within two years.


American Journal of Surgery | 1981

Acid corrosive gastritis: A plea for delayed surgical approach

Zvi Gimmon; Arie L. Durst

Acid corrosive gastritis is infrequently seen. It spares the esophagus and damages the antrum. It causes mucosal ulceration, damages the muscularis and ends in a typical antral stricture. The dynamic perpetuating pathophysiologic events, starting with coagulation necrosis, impose postponement of surgical intervention. Two cases of second degree acid corrosive gastritis are presented. Surgery was performed in both patients, only after dysphagia and vomiting became intractable.


American Journal of Surgery | 1982

Simplified method for the detection of choledochal stones

Eitan Shiloni; Yacov Berlatzky; Arie L. Durst

Abstract Intraoperative cholangiography is an essential part of cholecystectomy. Visualization of choledochal stones can be difficult when dealing with small calculi and a nondilated common bile duct. A simple method to detect such small stones is described. The method was used in 120 patients undergoing cholecystectomy, and in 5 of them calculi not visualized on operative cholangiography were detected.


Surgery | 1977

Mesenteric panniculitis: review of the leterature and presentation of cases.

Arie L. Durst; Herbert R. Freund; Eliezer Rosenmann; David Birnbaum


Archives of Surgery | 1972

Acute Pancreatitis and Hyperamylasemia in Renal Homograft Recipients

Israel Penn; Arie L. Durst; Marcel Machado; Charles G. Halgrimson; Arthur S. Booth; Charles W. Putman; Carl G. Groth; Thomas E. Starzl


Gastroenterology | 1983

An unusually high incidence of gastrointestinal obstruction by persimmon bezoars in Israeli patients after ulcer surgery

Evyatar Z. Moriel; A. Ayalon; Ahmed Eid; Daniel Rachmilewitz; Michael M. Krausz; Arie L. Durst


Archives of Surgery | 1997

Pancreaticogastrostomy After Pancreatoduodenectomy: A Retrospective Study of 28 Patients

Alon J. Pikarsky; Michael Muggia-Sullam; Ahmed Eid; Sergey Lyass; Allan I. Bloom; Arie L. Durst; Eitan Shiloni


Archives of Surgery | 1991

Safety of Surgical Procedures Performed by Residents

Abraham Shaked; Ilan Calderom; Arie L. Durst


Archives of Surgery | 1983

The Role of Splenectomy in Gaucher's Disease

Eitan Shiloni; Daniel Bitran; Eliezer Rachmilewitz; Arie L. Durst

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Ahmed Eid

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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Herbert R. Freund

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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Michael M. Krausz

Technion – Israel Institute of Technology

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Sergey Lyass

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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Abraham Shaked

University of Pennsylvania

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A Gabizon

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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Allan I. Bloom

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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