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Guy J. Maddern

Researcher at University of Adelaide

Publications -  672
Citations -  23210

Guy J. Maddern is an academic researcher from University of Adelaide. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Internal medicine. The author has an hindex of 72, co-authored 595 publications receiving 20809 citations. Previous affiliations of Guy J. Maddern include Leicester General Hospital & Royal Australasian College of Surgeons.

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Preoperative biliary drainage for distal obstruction: the case against revisited

TL;DR: No conclusive evidence exists confirming the role of preoperative biliary drainage in reversing the physiological disturbances resulting from biliary obstruction to improve outcome, but it is possible that in certain patients, PBD may deleteriously affect outcome by bacterial contamination of the bile.
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Intra-arterial Iodine 131–Labeled Lipiodol as Adjuvant Therapy After Curative Liver Resection for Hepatocellular Carcinoma: A Phase 2 Clinical Study

TL;DR: This pilot study failed to demonstrate any clinically significant adverse effect of adjuvant therapy by intra-arterial (131)I-lipiodol after curative liver resection for HCC, and suggests a benefit in lowering tumor recurrence.
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Percutaneous endoscopic laser discectomy.

TL;DR: Given the extremely low level of evidence available for this procedure it was recommended that the procedure be regarded as experimental until results are available from a controlled clinical trial, ideally with random allocation to an intervention and control group.
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Minimally invasive surgery for primary hyperparathyroidism: systematic review.

TL;DR: The proposed role of minimally invasive parathyroid surgery is for patients with primary hyperparathyroidism who have unilateral parathyro pathological features, and it is suggested that their introduction be monitored as part of a trial in Australia, from which data should be accrued to a register.
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Humidified gas prevents hypothermia induced by laparoscopic insufflation: a randomized controlled study in a pig model.

TL;DR: The majority of heat lost during laparoscopic insufflation is due to water evaporation, and laparoscopy-induced hypothermia may be prevented by using heated and humidified gasinsufflation.