A 13-year-old boy in New Zealand had part of his bowel surgically removed after swallowing nearly 200 neodymium magnets.
Lancashire Post on MSN
Groundbreaking surgery developed in Lancashire attracts global medical attention
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The most important fact general surgeon David Croasdale needs to explain to patients considering robotic surgery is it’s not ...
Neodymium is a rare-earth metal element used to make some of the strongest magnets available and they can be easy to buy ...
Researchers have found in a new study that laparoscopic totally extraperitoneal repair, with selective adjunct techniques, is ...
Texas Children's Hospital in North Austin becoming known for surgery to reroute the intestines in children with SMA syndrome.
As a bystander watching Dr. Shankar Raman work, you might think he’s playing a video game. Each hand is on a controller. He’s ...
A 13-year-old boy was admitted to hospital after four days of abdominal pain – when he then admitted to doctors that he'd ...
Surgeons in New Zealand had to remove part of the 13-year-old boy's bowel after he obtained banned magnets online.
In the next 10 years, it's hoped half a million robotic procedures will be completed per year. | ITV News Meridian ...
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