scholarly journals Sportsman’s hernia

2019 ◽  
Vol 6 (7) ◽  
pp. 2659
Author(s):  
Ketan Vagholkar ◽  
Shivangi Garima ◽  
Yash Kripalani ◽  
Shantanu Chandrashekhar ◽  
Suvarna Vagholkar

Sportsman’s hernia is a complex entity with injuries occurring at different levels in the groin region. Each damaged anatomical structure gives rise to a different set of symptoms and signs making the diagnosis difficult. The apprehension of a hernia is foremost in the mind of the surgeon. Absence of a hernia sac adds to the confusion. Hence awareness of this condition is essential for the general surgeon to avoid misdiagnosis. 

2021 ◽  
pp. 15-17
Author(s):  
Sukanta Sikdar ◽  
Mala Mistri ◽  
Piyas Sengupta ◽  
Tuhinsubhra Manda

Background: Scrotal abdomen is not a common today, but most challenging case even in experienced general surgeon, as there is no standard surgical procedure. They present as a huge inguinoscrotal swelling for a longstanding, neglected to treatment, because fear of operative intervention and remote places where medical service is inadequate. The morbidity and mortality also high because of forced reduction of the herniated viscera to the abdominal cavity, which is accustomed to being relatively empty for long duration, may cause alteration in the intra-abdominal and intra-thoracic pressures, leading to complications such as ACS, precipitation of cardiovascular or respiratory compromise, hernia recurrence and wound dehiscence . We present this ca Case presentation: se of giant inguinoscrotal hernia of a 72 years old male who had difculty in performing his daily activities. Patient underwent emergency mesh repair after reduction of content through inguinal approach. Giant inguinal hernia containing almost whole abdomen with terminal 50 cm ileum, caecum, appendix, ascending colon, hepatic exure of colon and transverse colon with omentum in the hernia sac and the patient had an uneventful recovery with eventual discharge on postoperative day 8. The giant inguinal hernias are uncommon in today's surgical Conclusion: practice. Management of which is challenging with grave complications but early intervention and postoperative monitoring to raised IAP and its complications which can save the patient. We report this case of an elderly patient with an acute presentation of scrotal abdomen with contents as both direct and indirect component which has been managed successfully with tension free open mesh hernioplasty and biological repair without debulking of the hernia contents and this case supported by a review of the literature.


2021 ◽  
Vol 118 (32) ◽  
pp. e2106640118
Author(s):  
Paris Will ◽  
Elle Merritt ◽  
Rob Jenkins ◽  
Alan Kingstone

Throughout our species history, humans have created pictures. The resulting picture record reveals an overwhelming preference for depicting things with minds. This preference suggests that pictures capture something of the mind that is significant to us, albeit at reduced potency. Here, we show that abstraction dims the perceived mind, even within the same picture. In a series of experiments, people were perceived as more real, and higher in both Agency (ability to do) and Experience (ability to feel), when they were presented as pictures than when they were presented as pictures of pictures. This pattern persisted across different tasks and even when comparators were matched for identity and image size. Viewers spontaneously discriminated between different levels of abstraction during eye tracking and were less willing to share money with a more abstracted person in a dictator game. Given that mind perception underpins moral judgement, our findings suggest that depicted persons will receive greater or lesser ethical consideration, depending on the level of abstraction.


Author(s):  
Samuel Mensah ◽  
Patrick Opoku Manu Maison ◽  
Ishmael Kyei ◽  
George Adjei Adjei ◽  
Martin T. Morna ◽  
...  

Aims: We aimed at auditing hernia surgeries performed at a secondary care center and determine the outcome of surgery based on the grade of operating surgeon. Study Design: A single center retrospective study. Place and Duration of Study: Department of Surgery of Ashanti regional Hospital between October 2015 to September 2018. Methodology: We included 259 patients, age ranging between 1 and 84 years, who underwent external hernia surgeries. Information retrieved included patient demographics, type of hernia, duration of hernia, whether hernia was emergency or elective, method of repair, whether surgery was performed by a surgeon or non-surgeon and early post-operative complications. Data was analyzed using PASW Statistics for Windows, Version 18.0. Chicago: SPSS Inc SPSS. Bivariate analysis was done to ascertain relationship between complications and operating doctor. Results: A total of 259 hernia surgeries were performed over the study period. There were 186 (71.8 %) males and 73 (28.2 %) females, age range of 1 to 84 years. There were 66 (25.5%) children and 193(74.5%) adults. Children in their first decade were the majority (22.4%) age group followed by adults in their 5th decade (17%).  Inguinal hernia was the most common (75.7%) type of hernia, 49 (18.9%) children and 147(56.6%) adults. There were 32 (12.4%) emergencies. Small bowel (20) was the most common content found in the hernia sac with 6 of them being gangrenous. Hematoma was the most common early complication. The majority (63.7%) of the cases were performed by the general surgeon and (20.1%) by house officers (interns) under supervision. Complications like haematoma, surgical site infection and acute urinary retention were more likely to occur in the non-surgeon operators. There was no statistically significant relation between the grade of operating surgeon and Haematoma (p = 0.28) and surgical site infection (p= 0.76). Conclusion: Hernias are common in children in the first decade and in adults in the 5th decade. With a well-structured training programme non-surgeon physicians can be trained to perform hernia surgeries with relatively low complication.


Author(s):  
Christoph Durt

The chapter offers a new view on consciousness and culture by investigating their relation to significance. Against the widespread restriction of consciousness to phenomenal aspects and that of culture to “thick description,” Durt argues that consciousness discloses aspects of significance, while culture encompasses shared significance as well as the forms of behavior that enact significance. Significance is intersubjective and constantly re-instantiated in new contexts of relevance rather than belonging to single individuals (cf. Gallagher, this volume). It is embedded in the shared world to which we relate by cultural forms of thinking and sense-making. Bringing together insights on the role of consciousness for the constitution of the world from Husserlian phenomenology with those on cultural forms of behavior by Wittgenstein and Ryle, Durt distinguishes different levels of significance accomplished by embodied consciousness and interaction. He explains that the real issue underlying “hybrid” concepts of the mind does not consist in embodied versus disembodied systems of production (cf. Di Paolo and De Jaegher, this volume), but in different levels of significance accomplished by consciousness and culture. Consciousness is embodied on every level, and it integrates different levels of significance.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Samuel Clack

<p>Traditionally, psychiatric syndromes have formed the primary target of explanation in psychopathology research. However, these syndromes have been significantly criticised for their conceptual weakness and lack of validity. Ultimately, this limits our ability to create valid explanations of these categories; if the target is invalid then our explanations will suffer as a consequence. Using depression as extended example, this doctoral thesis explores the theoretical and methodological challenges associated with classifying and explaining mental disorders, and develops an alternative explanatory approach and associated methodology for advancing our understanding of mental disorders – the Phenomena Detection Method (PDM; Clack & Ward, 2020; Ward & Clack, 2019).   This theoretical thesis begins by evaluating the current approaches to defining, classifying, and explaining mental disorders like depression, and explores the methodological and theoretical challenges with building theories of them. Next, in moving forward, I argue that the explanatory target in psychopathology research should shift from arbitrary syndromes to the central symptoms and signs of mental disorders. By conceptualising the symptoms of a disorder as clinical phenomena, and by adopting epistemic model pluralism as an explanatory strategy, we can build multi-faceted explanations of the processes and factors that constitute a disorder’s core symptoms. This core theoretical and methodological work is then followed by the development of the PDM. Unique in the field of psychopathology, the PDM links different phases of the inquiry process to provide a methodology for conceptualising the symptoms of psychopathology and for constructing multi-level models of the pathological processes that comprise them. Next, I apply the PDM to the two core symptoms of depression – ¬anhedonia and depressed mood – as an illustrative example of the advantages of this approach. This includes providing a more secure relationship between the pathology of depression and its phenotypic presentation, as well as greater insight into the relationship between underlying biological and psychological processes, and behavioural dysfunction. Next, I evaluate the PDM in comparison to existing metatheoretical approaches in the field and make some suggestions for future development. Finally, I conclude with a summary of the main contributions of this thesis.   Considering the issues with current diagnostic categories, simply continuing to build explanations of syndromes is not a fruitful way forward. Rather, the complexity of mental disorders suggests we need to represent their key psychopathological phenomena or symptoms at different levels or aspects using multiple models. This thesis provides the metatheoretical and methodological foundations for this to successfully occur.</p>


Current theories of artificial intelligence and the mind are dominated by the notion that thinking involves the manipulation of symbols. The symbols are intended to have a specific semantics in the sense that they represent concepts referring to objects in the external world and they conform to a syntax, being operated on by specific rules. I describe three alternative, non-symbolic approaches, each with a different emphasis but all using the same underlying computational model. This is a network of interacting computing units, a unit representing a nerve cell to a greater or lesser degree of fidelity in the different approaches. Computational neuroscience emphasizes the development and functioning of the nervous system; the approach of neural networks examines new algorithms for specific applications in, for example, pattern recognition and classification; according to the sub-symbolic approach , concepts are built up of entities called sub-symbols, which are the activities of individual processing units in a neural network. A frequently debated question is whether theories formulated at the subsymbolic level are ‘mere implementations’ of symbolic ones. I describe recent work due to Foster, who proposes that it is valid to view a system at many different levels of description and that, whereas any theory may have many different implementations, in general sub-symbolic theories may not be implementations of symbolic ones.


Author(s):  
Christian Kohls ◽  
Joachim Wedekind

Patterns are systematic approaches to documenting and classifying recurrent problems and their solutions. Patterns are usually based on empirical observations of good practices. This chapter provides a brief introduction to the core concepts of patterns, and distinguishes between patterns in the real world, patterns in the heads of designers, and pattern descriptions. It starts with basic definitions and explains the relationship between context, problems, forces, and solutions. Key concepts such as connecting patterns into pattern languages, finding whole forms, and sharing best practices among peers are elaborated. To distinguish between patterns in the world, in the heads of designers and in documentations it introduces a vocabulary that may clarify the different meanings of the term “pattern” in the context of design. A discussion of how patterns are recognized and induced by practitioners resolves why there are patterns at different levels of granularity and abstraction. Schema theory provides a theoretical framework to understand how successful strategies of problem solving are stored in the mind of an expert. To share this knowledge, patterns can be described in various ways using different pattern formats or templates. While there are many benefits of the pattern approach, both the pattern author and the pattern user face some challenges. Therefore some of the major benefits and challenges are discussed at the end of the chapter.


2013 ◽  
Vol 95 (7) ◽  
pp. e19-e20 ◽  
Author(s):  
A Tan ◽  
G Taylor ◽  
T Ahmed

Inguinal (inguinoscrotal) hernia and colon cancer are common conditions. However, it is rare for primary colon cancer to exist in an inguinal hernia sac and even rarer for it to perforate. We report such an event in our patient, who had an irreducible left inguinoscrotal hernia containing a sigmoid colon carcinoma that had perforated. This clinical picture can be easily confused with hernia strangulation unless the clinician is alert to the presence of certain sinister symptoms and signs.


Author(s):  
E. V. Bezvushko ◽  
O. O. Shpotyuk

The article describes the clinical effectiveness of restorations performed by composite materials for the restoration of hard tissues of teeth. Evaluated the status of restorations in children with different levels of oral hygiene. Influence of hygiene on the state of seals in 3,6,12 months. The aim of the study. Clinically assess the quality of restorations of chewing teeth made of composite materials with regard to oral hygiene. Material and methods of investigation. A total of 92 children aged 12-17 years were examined in whom 128 teeth with Cari I defects in Black were reconstructed with composite materials. To repair the defects, composite materials Charisma, Dipol and Esta-3 light curing were used. Results of the study and their discussion. In children with poor oral hygiene, the quality of the seals is deteriorated for all materials compared to children with good and satisfactory oral hygiene. Especially the number of teeth with violation of marginal adaptation, discrepancy of color, discomfort and marginal pigmentation increases. It should be noted that the disruption of the anatomical form of the restorations (6.9%), the appearance of roughness (8.6%), color disturbance (10.6%) and the appearance of pigmentation (17.7%) were detected more often in caries defects, Dipol. With poor oral hygiene, the violation of the anatomical structure of the restorations from the Charisma composite (2.3%) and the Esta-3 material (5.9%) is more often compared with children with good and satisfactory oral hygiene. Conclusions: Thus, the evaluation of the quality of restorations of the chewing group of teeth with composite materials showed that the level of oral hygiene significantly affects the quality of the fillings.      


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Pietraszewski ◽  
Annie E. Wertz

A debate surrounding modularity—the notion that the mind may be exclusively composed of distinct systems or modules—has held philosophers and psychologists captive for nearly forty years. Concern about this thesis—which has come to be known as the massive modularity debate—serves as the primary grounds for skepticism of evolutionary psychology’s claims about the mind. Here we will suggest that the entirety of this debate, and the very notion of massive modularity itself, is ill-posed and confused. In particular, it is based on a confusion about the level of analysis (or reduction) at which one is approaching the mind. Here, we will provide a framework for clarifying at what level of analysis one is approaching the mind, and explain how a systemic failure to distinguish between different levels of analysis has led to profound misunderstandings of not only evolutionary psychology, but also of the entire cognitivist enterprise of approaching the mind at the level of mechanism. We will furthermore suggest that confusions between different levels of analysis are endemic throughout the psychological sciences—extending well beyond issues of modularity and evolutionary psychology. Therefore, researchers in all areas should take preventative measures to avoid this confusion in the future.


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