Stones in the urinary tract (urinary calculus)

Stones in the urinary tract (urinary calculus) is a rock hard mass that forms in the urinary tract and can cause pain, bleeding, infection or blockage of urine flow.
These stones can form inside the kidneys (kidney stones) and in the bladder (bladder stones).
The process of stone formation is called urolitiasis (litiasis renal nefrolitiasis).

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Cause

Stone formation can occur because the urine is saturated with salts that can form bladder stones or because of water shortages normal inhibitors of stone formation.
Approximately 80% of calcium stones, the rest contains various substances, including uric acid, and minerals Sistin struvit.
Struvit stone (a mixture of magnesium, ammonium and phosphate), also called infection stones because these stones are formed only in the urine of infected.
Stone size varies, ranging from can not be seen with the naked eye until a fee of 2.5 centimeters or more.
Large stone called staghorn calculus. Stone was able to fill almost the entire renal pelvis and renal kalises.

Symptom

Stone, especially the small, could not cause symptoms.
Stone in the bladder can cause pain in the lower abdomen.
Stone blocking the ureter, renal pelvis and renal tubules can cause back pain or renal colic (severe colic pain).
Renal colic is characterized by severe pain that lost-emerged, usually in the region between ribs and hip bones, which spread to the abdomen, pubic area and inner thighs.
Other symptoms are nausea and vomiting, abdominal distention, fever, chills and blood in the urine.
Patients may be frequent urination, especially when the stones pass through the ureter.
Stones can cause urinary tract infections. If the stones block the flow of urine, bacteria will be trapped in the urine collected over the blockage, so there was an infection.
If this blockage lasts a long time, urine will flow back into the channel in the kidney, causing kidney emphasis will be inflated (Hydronephrosis) and can eventually damage the kidneys.

Diagnosis

Stones that do not cause symptoms, it may be known by accident on the examination of routine urine analysis (urinalysis).
Stone that causes pain is usually diagnosed based on symptoms of renal colic, coupled with tenderness in his back and groin or pain in the pubic area without obvious cause.
Microscopic analysis of urine may reveal blood, pus or a small crystal stones.
Usually do not need another examination, unless the pain settled more than a few hours or the diagnosis is uncertain.
Additional examinations that can help make a diagnosis is a 24-hour urine collection and blood sampling to assess the levels of calcium, Sistin, uric acid and other ingredients that can cause stones.
Abdominal x-rays may reveal calcium stones and stone struvit.
Other tests that may need to do is intravenous urography and retrograde urography.

Treatment

Small stones are not causing symptoms, obstruction or infection, usually needs no treatment.
Drink plenty of fluids will increase urine formation and helps remove some stones if the stone has been wasted, it is not necessary immediate treatment.
Renal colic can be reduced with narcotic pain medication.
Stones in the renal pelvis or ureter top section measuring one centimeter or less can often be solved by ultrasound (Extracorporeal Shock Wave Lithotripsy, ESWL).
Stone fragments will then be discarded in the urine.
Sometimes a stone removed through a small incision in the skin (percutaneous Nephrolithotomy, nefrolitotomi percutaneus), followed by ultrasonic treatment.
Small stones in the bottom of the ureter can be removed with the endoscope is inserted through the urethra and into the bladder.
Sometimes uric acid stones will dissolve gradually in the atmosphere of alkaline urine (for example by giving potassium citrate), but other stones can not be resolved in this manner.
Uric acid stones are larger, which causes blockage, it should be removed surgically.
The presence of stone struvit indicate a urinary tract infection, as it was given antibiotics.

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Prostate Cancer Surgery Video

This 3D medical animation on prostate cancer surgery

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What is the nature of benign neoplasm

fibrodenoma

1. What is the nature of benign neoplasm?
2. Name the kinds of benign mammary tumors?
3. Coming from where fibroadenema?
4. State the clinical picture of fibroadenema?
5. How do I diagnose fibroadenema Which?
6. How does the picture of fibroadenema macros?
7. Mention pinata bodies are or therapy that can be done in patients fibrooadenema?
8. How the description of fibroadenema microscope?
9. Coming from where filoides?
10. How the description of the tumor filoides macros?
11. State the clinical picture of filoides?
12. Mention pinata bodies are or therapy that can be done in patients filoides?
13. Please list description of filoides micros?
14. How do I diagnose filoides?
15. State the clinical picture of papilloma intraduktus?
16. Which comes from papilloma intraduktus?
17. State the clinical picture of multiple sclerosis adenosis?
18. Plasma cell mastitis is also referred to as mastitis?
19. Mention penyebap of fat necrosis?
20. State the clinical picture of fat necrosis?

1. • Consists of adult tissues like the home network, so there is cell differentiation
• mitotic activity there is no / little
• The growth of expensive / urgent
• Generally clear bersimpai
• slow growth
• No mengadkan metastases
• If the host is generally cured with oprasi
• Rarely have secondary inflammation
• rarely result in death

2. Fibroadenema, filoides tumor, papilloma intraduktus, sclerosis adenosis, plasma cell mastitis, fat necrosis.

3. Fibroadenema derived from benign neoplasm composed of stromal and glandular tissue.

4. Clinical features of fibroadenema namely:
• Growing slow, painless
• Single, multiple, unilateral, bilateral
• Last menstrual period / hsmil (enlarged)
• postmenopausal ? regression / hyalinization / classification

5. With FNAB examination supported by ultrasound

6. Preview makros from fibroadenema namely:
• 1cm-10cm
• 10 cm – 15 cm: Giant fibroadenomas, benign cystosarcoma-phylloides

7. Therapies that can be done is Oprasi (ekseisi)

8. Preview micros from fibrodenema:
• Network stromal depressed ? “capsule”
• fibroblastic stroma
• duct narrowing depressed ?

9. Filoides tumors derived from breast stroma and epithelial

10. Description of the tumor filoides macros are: garlobus and very lici.

11. Clinical features of tumor filoides namely:
• Tumor looks big and heavy
• The venous skin looks picture ecstasy, shiny skin
• No infiltration kekulit or malignant chest wall unless
• Consistency something solid, cystic and soft

12. Therapy is provided
• Simple Mastectomy
• Mastectomy subcutaneous.

13. Preview micros from tumor tissue fibro filodes namely its very mensomatik

14. FNAB was done by examination and supported by USG

15. Clinical features of duct papilloma tumors:
• Appeared as a secret blood from the teats
• Small size with a diameter of about 1 cm
• large tumors may be palpable as a subareolar mass.

16. Ductal papilloma tumors originating from the major lactiferous duct near the putting.

17. Clinical features of multiple sclerosis adenosis adenosis sclerosis is limited, such as fibrocystic disease.

18. Mastitis plasma cell mastitis in calls as well as blackheads (eat; secret channels that contain condensed)

19. Fat necrosis  by injury in the form of hard mass which is often somewhat painful, but not enlarged.

20. His clinical picture is that there is necrosis of fat tissue which then becomes fibrous.

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Squamous cell carcinoma

Squamous cell carcinoma

DEFINITIONS

Squamous cell carcinoma is a cancer that originated from the middle layer of the epidermis.
Bowen’s disease is a form of squamous cell carcinoma limited to the epidermis and has not penetrated into the underlying tissues (dermis). Skin that is exposed to visible brown-red and scaly or scabby and flat, sometimes resembling spots on psoriasis, dermatitis or fungal infections.

CAUSE

More than 90% of skin cancers grow in areas exposed to sunlight or other ultraviolet light.
This is apparently the primary cause of all types of skin cancer.
Other risk factors are:

1. Genetic factors (skin cancer is more common in those light-skinned, blue or green eyes and blond or red hair)

2. Pollution by chemicals

3. Excessive exposure by X-ray or other radiation

cancer

SYMPTOMS

cancer 2
Squamous cell carcinoma usually develops on skin exposed to sunlight, but can also grow on the skin anywhere or in specific places (eg the tongue or lining of the mouth).
This cancer can grow on normal skin or skin damaged by sun exposure (actinic keratoses).
Squamous cell carcinoma begins as a scaly reddish area with a surface scab that does not go away. Then the tumor will grow to stand out, sometimes the surface resembles a wart. Cancer eventually becomes an open wound and grow into the tissue beneath.
Most squamous cell carcinomas affect only the area around it, which penetrate into the surrounding tissue. But sometimes spread to distant places (metastases), which can be fatal.

DIAGNOSIS

Diagnosis based on symptoms.
To distinguish skin cancer from other diseases, performed a biopsy (tissue sampling for examination with a microscope).

TREATMENT

Squamous cell carcinoma and Bowen disease treated with the tumor, either by kuretasi and elektrodesikasi or cut by scalpel.
Actinic keratoses can turn into squamous cell carcinoma. Actinic keratoses were destroyed with a solution of nitrogen or creams fluorouracil .

PREVENTION
Protect your skin from the sun using hats, long sleeved shirts, long pants or long skirts.
Sunlight is the most powerful in daylight, so avoid the sun during the day.
Use high-quality sunscreen (minimum SPF 15).
Apply sunscreen at least half an hour before sunlight exposure and repeat as often as possible.

Check your skin regularly, things that need to be suspected are:

1. The presence of new growth that forms an ulcer or slow healing

2. Change the color, size and structure of growth in the skin or the inflammation, pain, itching or bleeding

3. Skin wound in an asymmetrical, irregular boundary edges, the color is more than one type or diameter greater than 6 mm.

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The Lateral Inguinal Hernia

inguinalis hernia

1. What is the lateral inguinal hernia?
Answer:
Lateral inguinal hernia is the inguinal hernia that leaves the abdomen through the inguinal annulus profundus and an oblique moving down through the inguinal canal lateral to the inferior epigastric artery.

2. What factors are memnyebabkan occurrence ingunalis lateral hernia?
Answer:
The factors that cause the occurrence of lateral inguinal hernia:
a) persistent processus vaginalis
b) elevation of pressure within the abdominal cavity (such as chronic cough, prostatic hypertrophy, constipation, pregnancy)
c) The weakness of the abdominal wall muscles (because of age, and nerve damage ileoinguinalis norvus ileofemoralis after apendiktomi)

3. What clinical symptoms in patients with lateral inguinal hernia?
Answer:
a) Occur lump on groin when standing, coughing, sneezing or straining, and disappear when lying down
b) pain accompanied by nausea or vomiting in the state strangulation inkarserasi

4. How the lateral inguinal hernia diagnosis?
Answer:
Lateral inguinal hernia diagnosis includes other masses such as lymphadenopathy in the groin, varicocele, the testis does not descend, lipomas, and hematoma.

5. How do I manually repositioning techniques are effectively used in patients lateral inguinal hernia?
Answer:
By providing gentle pressure on the mass of the annulus toward the inguinal hernia is usually with the patient in a lower head position (Trendelenburg).

6. How does a physical examination at the lateral inguinal hernia?
Answer:
First performed at the groin inspection. Then, the index finger is placed on the lateral side of the scrotal skin, and included all funikulus spermatikus until the fingertips reach the inguinal annulus profundus. If the examiners fingers inside the inguinal canal inguinal hernia advanced down the canal on the lateral side of a finger.

7. Please list two ways a physical examination at the lateral inguinal hernia?
Answer:
a) Finger Test
b) Thumb Test

8. How to finger test performed on the lateral inguinal hernia?
Answer:
The index finger is inserted through the annulus at the inguinal canal externus, internus and annulus toward the patient told to push, if there is displacement who felt at the fingertips of patients suffered from diseases of the lateral inguinal hernia.

9. How thumb test performed on inguinal hernia leteralis?
Answer:
PD annulus thumb shut internus (halfway between spina iliaca anterior superior and tubercle pubicum, + 2 cm above it). If the lump does not come out when people push the hernia disease patients inuinalis lateralis.

10. What causes the lateral inguinal hernia in infants and children?
Answer:
Inguinal hernia in infants and children due to congenital abnormalities of the processus vaginalis does not close it.

11. How patofisiologis from ingunalis lateral hernia?
Answer:
Lateral inguinal hernia out of the peritoneal cavity through the annulus internus, then enter the inguinal canal, and exit through the inguinal annulus externus.
12. State the characteristics of the lateral inguinal hernia?
Answer:
The characteristics of lateral hernia ingunalis namely:
v elliptical shape,
v The contents are not easily enter
v Often inkarserata
v Tumb test: hernia did not exit
v Finger test: palpable at the end
v Defective: annulus internus

13. Why does the skin incision hernia lateral ingunalis must be determined where exactly?
Answer:
Because in order to prevent injury to the nerves and ilionguinalis iliohipogastrikus, which are important in skin innervation of the skin below the abdomen, penis and scrotum.

14. What is the procedure performed surgery on the lateral inguinal hernia patients?
Answer:
Procedures used at the lateral inguinal hernia surgery include:
a) Herniotomi: removal of the hernia bag; contents returned to the abdomen; layers of muscle and fascia sutured; can be done through leparoskopi on outpatients.
b) Hernioplasti: involving the tailoring reinforcement, which extends to repair hernias.
c) Resection of the ischemic intestine to USU in conjunction with hernia repair on terstrangulasi hernia.

15. How hernioplastik operating principles?
Answer:
In hernioplastik memeperkecil action inguinal annulus internus and strengthen the back wall inguinal canal.

16. What is the difference operation Bassini method and the method of Mc Vay?
Answer:
ü Bassini Method: sewing conjoint tendon (muskulus meeting tranversus internus muskulus obliqus internus abdomen and abdominal) to the inguinal ligament Poupart.
Mc Vay ü Method: sewing tranversa fascia, the transverse abdominal and muskulus muskulus obliqus internus to Cooper ligament.

17. What is the purpose Bassini action on the lateral inguinal hernia?
Answer:
The aim is to tighten the action Bassini muskulus conjoined tendon and transversus abdominis internus obliqus to the inguinal ligament.

18. Name the two primary components that mark Shouldice action?
Answer:
a) Involve the techniques used in inguinal annulus profundus and accompanied by a correction Indirect inguinal hernia
b) Consider the use of the posterior inguinal wall and is a major goal in the treatment of indirect inguinal hernia.

19. What are the causes of complications in patients after undergoing inguinal herniorafi?
Answer:
Complications arise because the placement of stitches that carelessness on the external iliac artery or femoral.

20. What effect if ilioinguinalis and iliohypogastrikus nerve injury in patients with lateral inguinal hernia?
Answer:
If the injury resulted in feelings of numbness and paresthesias in the area of skin.
21. What effect if the spermatic artery was damaged in patients with lateral inguinal hernia?
Answer:
If the damage it can cause ischemic orchitis and testicular atrophy.

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Haemoroids

Haemorrhoids

Definition: Swelling or inflammation of veins in the rectum and anus

Known: the internal and external Haemorrhoids

Symptoms:
• fresh blood out the stool (feces, especially when going out or after feces exit (Stage I)
• Get out when the anus lump can be entered or can not be entered (stage IIS / d IV).
• Pain in the rectum,
• sometimes feels itchy anus

Physical examination
• Pale / Anemis (continuous bleeding)
• There is a lump on the anus (stage III-IV)
• Pain at the anus (Infection / thrombosis)

Therapy:
• Stage I & II without or with hemorrhage: outpatient, medical, dietary regulation, sclerotherapy.
• Stage III & IV: MRS, band.operasi haemoroidektomi rubber ligation.

haemoroids

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Fistula Parianal

1. What is a fistula?
o Communication / abnormal relationship between the two hollow organs or hollow organ and the outside.

2. What causes it?
o Leakage anastomatic, trauma / injury to the bowels, chronic disease, inflammation / infection, abscesses, diverticulitis.

3. What complications may occur?
o Expenditure high fistula, malnutrition, skin problems, and patients who are not comfortable / pleasant.

4. What is perianal fistula?
o anal fistula from the rectum to the perianal skin.

5. What causes perianal fistula?
o It is usually caused by infection of anal glands.
o Usually perianus abscess caused by infected glands of analysts who mengerosi into the underlying tissue. Cultures of the fistula abscess anal rectum showed mixed infection with E.coli dominant.

6. What are the signs – the signs and symptoms?
o Flow perianal, perirectal swelling (perirectal abscess)
o dull pain in the rectum and mild systemic complaints continue to be a severe throbbing pain perianus accompanied by fever, chills and malaise.
o Redness, tenderness and protrusion of generalized into a common picture.

7. What happens when a chronic fistula occurred long?
o chronic fistula occurred a long time can degenerate into malignant carcinoma of the skin planoseluler.

8. What is produced on digital rectal examination?
o In general digital rectal fistula can be palpated between the forefinger in the anus (not rectum) and your thumb on the skin of the perineum as a rope as thick as approximately 3 mm (digital rectal bidigital)

9. What should be noted on the examination of perianal fistulas?
o Inspection must be equipped with rektoskopi to determine the presence of disease such as carcinoma of the rectum or proctitis tuberculosis, amoebic / morbus crohn.

10. What Goodsall’s legal?
o native fistula anterior to transfer the line will run straight through the rectum above and come out with more spending, while the rear has a first field cornering.

11. How Goodsall’s law can be remembered?
o Think of a dog with a straight nose and tail of the curve.

12. Located where the mensekrasi mucus glands?
o-secreting anal glands are located in the submucosal intestine, in muscles and between the longitudinal muscle layer and circulation, and is associated with anal canal through ducts are long and narrow.

13. What happens in chronic fistel long?
o Fistel chronic ages can be susceptible to malignant degeneration planoseluler carcinoma of the skin.

14. Call and explain the differential diagnosis of perianal fistula!
o Hidradenitis supurativa an inflammation of apocrine sweat glands which usually form multiple subcutaneous fistula is occasionally found in the armpits and generally does not extend to the deeper structures.
o Sinus pilonidalis sakrokoksigeal there are only in the folds derived from the nest and the dorsal hair of koksigeus bone or bone end of the sacrum

15. Fistel proctitis can occur in?
o Fistel proctitis can occur in morbus Crohn’s, tuberculosis, amubiasis, fungal infections, and diverticulitis.

16. In as much as possible done fistulotomi fistula. The point is?
o fistel means of an aperture is opened up kelubang skin origin. The wound was left open so that the healing started from the basic per sekundam intentionem. The wound will heal in time is usually rather short. Sometimes dibuthkan two-stage operation to avoid the anal sphincter terpotongnya.

17. What can cause recurrent fistulas?
o fistula can recur if the holes do not participate in the opened or removed, the fistula did not contribute to open branches, or skin wound was closed before reaching the surface of granulation tissue.

18. Mention how perianal fistula prevention!
o At the fistula can be done fistulotomi or fistulektomi.

19. When and for what is needed use a ton yells?
o The use of loose Setons is required at a high level of fistulas (ie, trans-sphincteric and suprasphincteric) to reduce the risk of incontinence or in the case of poor wound healing is anticipated. A Seton is a nonabsorbable nylon suture or silk That is guided through the fistula tract and tied suture placement exteriorly to maintain within the tract and to cause compression of the tract. A Seton are nonabsorbable nylon or silk suture is guided through a brochure and fistula exteriorly bound to keep the suture placement in the book and cause compression of the book

20. What happens when a surgical therapy be delayed?
o result in further tissue damage due to an abscess anorektum should be considered an emergency.
o The expansion of multilateral cooperation may extend into the thigh, scrotum and even the abdominal wall.

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Labiopalatoscisis

1. What is labiopalatoscisis?

Cracks in the ceiling, which occurred due to failure of fusion between the processus palatinus left / right on the median line during embryonal.

2. State the classification of labiopalatoscisis is?

classification is

· P. Unilateral Sinistra / The right completa If gaps occur only misconstrued cleft lip and one side does not extend down to the nose.

· P. If the gap completa bilateral cleft occurs only misconstrued the one hand to the lips and elongated noses.

· P. Inkompleta If gaps occur in both sides of cleft lip and extends up into the nose.

3. Is the cause of the labiopalatoscisis?

The causes are genetic factors that influence environmental factors (multifactorial polygenic) but until now it is not certain gene causes

4. Please list external factors / mempenpengaruhi of environmental which labiopalatochisis?

· Maternal age factor

· Drugs. Acetosal, aspirin (SCHARDEIN-1985) Rifampicin, Fenasetin, sulphonamides, Aminoglikosid, Indomethacin, Flufetamat Acid, Ibuprofen, penicillamine, antihistamines can cause cracks the ceiling. Antineoplastic, corticosteroid

· Nutrition

· Diseases Syphilis infection, rubella virus

· Radiation

· Emotional Stress

· Trauma, (first trimester)

5. Name the five chromosomes that are responsible for the incident labiopalatoscisis?

of chromosome No. 2, 4, 6, 17 and 19.

6. Closing the gap on labipalatoscisis Langitan at what age children?

in children aged child can start talking, that is the age of approximately 2 (two) years.

7. What methods are in use for closing the gap?

The method worked, among others, mucoperiosteal flap technique (von Langenbeck, Wardill, etc.), applications of z-plasty (Furlow, Cronin, etc) etc.

8. Mention insendensi from labiopalatoscisis?

insendensinya adalal 1-2 per 1000 live births (1-2 ‰)

and the Island of Timor-NTT: 6-9 ‰

9. Is the problem for patients with complications from labiopalatoscisis?

+ Difficulty eating / drinking
+ Easy street upper respiratory infection (ARI)
+ Middle ear infection (Otitis Media)
+ Nasal (Nasolalia, Nasal Escape)
+ Psychiatric disorders: shame, low self-esteem

10. Is the problem of complications from labiopalatosicis parents are?

· Psychic Disorders: shame, the curse of disease

· Isolated / hidden

11. Therapeutic management of the labiopatoscisis is?

handling is:

1. Multidis (Cross-Sectoral)

2. Related medical fields:

· Plastic Surgery

· Ortodontia

· ENT

· IKA

· Radiology

· Child psychiatry

· Speech Therapy)

12. How protocol handling on labiopalatoscisis?

protocol handling is

1. Explanation to the parents
2. Age 3 months (rule over ten): Operation lips and alanasi (nose), ear evaluation.
3. Age 10-12 months: Qperasi palato / groove ceiling, hearing and ear evaluation.
4. Age 1-4 years: Evaluation of talk, speech theraphist after 3 months postoperatively
5. Age 4 years: Consider repalatoraphy or / and Pharyngoplasty
6. Age 6 years: Evaluation of tooth and jaw, a hearing evaluation.
7. Age 9-10 years: alveolar bone graft (the addition of bone in the gap gums)
8. Age 12-13 years: Final touch, the improvements when necessary.
9. Age 17 years: Evaluation of the bones of the face, if necessary advancementosteotomy LeFORTI

13. Name the pre-operative treatment of labiopalatoscisis?

operatifnya pre treatment are:

o Newborns dg degan Langitan Cleft lip,

o treatment with plastic surgery,

o Orthodonsia, IKA example:

Plaster lip o

o Dot Long

o Diet / Nutrition

o Pencagahan ARI

14. Mention Education Post Palatoplasty on labiopalatoscisis?

CONTROL to sleep should be tilted / à prevent aspiration of stomach bleeding when terjdi

· No not eat / drink too hot / cold will inhibit the healing process of stitching

· No can suck / suck during the first month post-operation will prevent the failure of unification palato

15. When the operation execution time (timing operation) from his cleft Langitan (labiopalatoscisis)?

operationnya time execution timing is as follows: At the age Age 18-24 months

16. How to distinguish between between labioschizis, palato schizis gnato schizis is?

· Labioschizis is akibatkegagalan lip fusion between processusnasalis medialisdengan Nasalis processus lateralis left / right during the period of embryonic lip formation, whereas on the lower lip due to failure of fusion between the left and right processus mandibulris median gariss

· Labio palato is Cracks in the ceiling, which occurred due to failure of fusion between the processus palatinus left / right on the median line during embryonal

· Gnato schizis: a gap in the alveolar process due to failure of fusion between the processus processus maxilaris Nasalis media with the left / right and most often occurs in the upper jaw.

Menyrtai normal and cleft lip or palate gap

17. What long-term prognosis?

Parents of children with cleft lip / palate usually have many concerns about the child’s physical appearance, as well as the development of speaking, social, emotional, and academic. The good news is that most of the results of surgery for palate and lip / cleft results are not obvious traces. In addition, with proper care and intervention, children with cleft lip and / or palate can develop normally in every aspect of life

18. How is the examination of labiopalatoscisis?

INKOMPLETA à when the cleft of the uvula to the foramen incisivum

- KOMPLETA à arcus sp alveolari of uvula (through the foramen incisium)

19. What is a cleft lip (cleft lip) and palate gap (cleft palate)?

Cleft lip and palate gap occurs when the lip or palate in infants are not fused together, resulting in parts of the palate (cleft palate) or / and happening parts of the upper lip or cleft palate (cleft lip). This condition occurs in the early phases of pregnancy in the first trimester and can happen on one side only (unilateral) or on both sides (bilateral cleft lip / palate).

20. What treatment to repair cleft lip / palate?

Improved treatment for cleft lip and palate is usually started at a very young age and continues throughout the child grows and develops. Ideally, a team consisting of various fields of science such as reconstruction plastic surgeons, dentists / bone, and speech therapists will work together to decide the best therapy and carefully monitor the improvement of children from time to time. Surgery of cleft lip / palate can be done anytime from when the baby was a few days to several months. Surgery ceiling cracks usually done at ages more, starting from the age of several months to several years. Often, children with gaps at the ceiling requires attention to details from the dentist / bone to see the growth and development of the teeth, face and jaw. Along the growth of children, speech therapists are needed to help children make suara-suara/kata-kata correctly.

REFERENCES

* Brata Simade et al. Dignosis guidelines and therapy of disease in the field of science. Jakarta: fk ui, 1999: 32.33
* Syamsul sjamsuhidajat and win decong. Cleft lip in a science textbook editions refeisi disease. Jakarta: EGC, 1997: 841-844
* Trice and filson. Labiopaltoscisis clinical concepts in the pathophysiology of disease processes over language edition 4 dr. Peter’s gift. Jakarta: EGC, 1995: 402.405

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Mega Colon Desease

mega colon picture

1. What is a mega colon / hisprung disease?

Answer:

Mega colon / hisprung disease is a disease that occurs because of problems at the bottom persyarafan colon, rectum until the intestines start on it. Neural useful for making broad and narrow intestines moving normally do not exist at all or if there is very little.

2. Any symptoms that occurred in patients with mega colon / hisprung disease?

Answer:

The symptoms that occur in patients with mega colon / hisprung diseases, among others:

· In newborn babies can not remove meconium (first stool of the newborn)

· Unable to defecate within 24-48 hours after birth, distended abdomen, vomiting

· Watery diarrhea (in newborns)

· Weight loss does not increase

· Malabsorption

3. What is the cause of the occurrence of mega colon / hisprung disease?

Answer:

Some cause mega colon / hisprung diseases, among others:

· Descent, since this disease is a congenital disease

· Environmental factors

· The absence of ganglion cells in the rectum or the rectosigmoid colon

· The inability rectum sphincter relaxes

4. What about the pathophysiology of the mega colon / hisprung disease?

Answer:

Pathophysiology of mega colon / hisprung disease are:

Tues parasympathetic ganglion of the plexus in the colon aurbach no

Peristaltic segment decreased colon, rectum and colon adenoma on the bottom

Hypertrophy

Proximal part of colon distention

Abdominal distension

Continue reading

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All About Torax Trauma

torax picture

1. Question:

What is a trauma?

Answer:

Conditions caused by a wound or injury.

2. Question:

What’s thorax trauma?

Answer:

Thorax trauma is an injury or injuries related to the thorax or chest cavity can cause damage to the thorax or chest wall or the contents of the cavum thorax (chest cavity) caused by sharp or blunt object and can cause pain in your chest condition.

3. Question:

Organ whatever thorax pain due to trauma?

Answer:

Traumatic injury to the thorax or chest can cause damage to the chest wall, lung, heart, large blood vessels and surrounding organs including the viscera (organs in the great variety in the chest cavity).

4. Question:

In the thorax or chest trauma, are classified into how many?

Answer:

Broadly speaking the thorax or chest trauma are classified into two, namely:

a) blunt trauma, which is mostly caused by traffic accidents.

b) penetrating the thorax or chest trauma, because trauma can be caused by a sharp (sharps puncture), gunshot trauma (gunshot), and a penetrating blunt chest trauma.

5. Question:

What is the process of changes that occur due to the trauma of the thorax or patofisiologinya?

Answer:

As a result of the thorax or chest trauma that occurred, causing the failed ventilation (air turnover), failure of gas exchange at the alveolar level (a small organ-like pockets in the lungs), circulatory failure due to changes in hemodynamic (blood circulation). This third factor may cause hypoxia (lack of supply of O 2) in hypoxia sustained cellular network. Hypoxia at the tissue level could cause stimulation of the cytokines that can stimulate the occurrence of Adult Respiratory Distress Syndrome (ARDS), Systemic Inflamation Response Syndrome (SIRS) and sepsis.

6. Question:

What’s the worst effects of the trauma of the thorax and the cause?

Answer:

Impact trauma of the thorax is worst than death, is caused by shock.

7. Question:

How do I know the client with the trauma of experiencing a shock thorax?

Answer:

Ø Akral cold and wet:

o Cold à contraction due to peripheral vascular perfusion to meet the vital organs.

o Wet sympathetic mechanism à à à stimulate adrenaline increased sweating.

Ø rapid and weak pulse

o Fast due to meet the perfusion.

o Weak due hipovolemi.

o Hypoxia (lack of supply of O 2).

o Hiperkabnia (excess CO 2 in the blood).

o Metabolic Acidosis.

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