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A remarkable machine lets doctors operate from across the room and quickly gets patients back on their feet. But will hospitals pay the price?
The need for a U.S. joint replacement registry is urgent, but should the government or orthopedic surgeons control the data?
Techniques of “bloodless” surgery, honed for those who refuse transfusions, could help stem what many call an overuse of blood.
A woman assaulted with a box-cutter finds a friend and guide in her plastic surgeon.
With his creation of the American College of Surgeons 100 years ago, Franklin Martin introduced a vital aspect to surgery: regulation.
Researchers may have discovered a way to restore vocal cords using a polymer found in moisturizing creams.
A father and son fight through the ordeal of multiple surgeries to repair the boy’s skull.
More than 2,000 objects remarkably unfit for consumption lodged in throats, lungs and stomachs. One physician has retrieved them all.
If residents’ long shifts endanger patients, lightening the load should reduce the risk. Trouble is, there’s no evidence it does.
Though not as sexy as genomics or the latest miracle drug, improved techniques and technology for fixing aortas are saving lots of lives.
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