Surgery Current Research
Surgery Current Research
Overview
An international open-access peer-review journal called Surgery: Current Research emphasizes medical specialties and concentrates on manual operation and cutting-edge instrumental techniques used in the current research sector. Surgery is used to treat pathological conditions including disease, burns, and injuries while also aiding in the study of how the body functions and appears through educational research on the patient.
The journal's material can be accessed for free. Journal covers a wide range of surgical classifications, including both invasive and non-invasive surgical techniques. The manuscript may be submitted as research, a review, a case report, a commentary, an editorial, etc. For acquired papers, the editorial office uses a quick 21-day peer review process to ensure quality standards are met while publishing the submitted manuscripts. The readers will be helped to access and distribute knowledge for the advancement of scientific society by the quick and editorially impartial publishing mechanism.
Journal Highlights
- Liver surgery
- Oculoplastic surgery
- Cardiac Surgery
- Neurosurgery
- Oral Surgery
Liver Surgery: A hepatectomy, also known as a liver resection, is a surgical treatment to remove a portion of your liver. As long as the remaining portion of your liver is healthy, you can have up to two thirds of it removed. You could only need a smaller piece removed if you have liver illness. Your liver is regenerative. Your remaining liver will enlarge to its previous size if it is healthy.
In order to remove a malignant, precancerous, or benign (noncancerous) tumour, surgeons typically perform a partial liver resection. Liver cancer can be primary, meaning it starts in the liver, or secondary, meaning it starts in another organ and spreads to the liver.
The most typical types of liver cancer managed with partial hepatectomy are as follows: Hepatocellular carcinoma (primary liver cancer)
Cholangiocarcinoma (primary liver cancer)
Metastatic colorectal cancer (secondary liver cancer)
Oculoplastic Surgery: Because the diseases treated are mostly exterior, oculoplastic surgery is ideally suited to use telehealth within the field of eye care. However, telehealth was hardly ever used in this field prior to the COVID-19 pandemic. Oculoplastic surgeons used telemedicine significantly more in 2020, especially synchronous home-based video telehealth. Although surgeons have argued for its usage for a variety of other visit types as well, post-operative visits have proven to be the technology's most popular application. Though telemedicine has received support from oculoplastic surgery associations, there isn't much agreement among experts in the field about how it should be applied.
Cardiac Surgery: Operations on the heart or significant blood vessels are referred to as cardiovascular surgery, also known as cardiac surgery. It is widely used to treat ischemic heart disease's side effects as well as congenital heart disease, valvular heart disease from a variety of causes, including endocarditis (for instance, after coronary artery bypass grafting). Heart transplants are also a component of it.
On September 2, 1952, at the University of Minnesota, Dr. C. Walton Lillehei aided lead surgeon Dr. F. John Lewis in performing the first successful intracardiac repair of a congenital heart defect utilising hypothermia. In 1953, Alexander Alexandrovich Vishnevsky performed the first local anaesthetic heart surgery. The first open-heart procedure in Canada was conducted by Dr. John Carter Callaghan in 1956.
Neurosurgery: The medical speciality of neurosurgery, sometimes known as neurological surgery or brain surgery, focuses on the surgical treatment of illnesses affecting any part of the nervous system, including the brain, spinal cord, and peripheral nervous system. In the diagnosis and treatment of modern neurosurgery, neuroradiology techniques are used. They consist of magnetoencephalography (MEG), stereotactic radiosurgery, computed tomography (CT), magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), PET, and positron emission tomography (PET). In some neurosurgical procedures, functional and intra-operative MRI is used.
Oral Surgery: Oral and maxillofacial surgery, a subspecialty of medicine, specializes in procedures such as facial reconstruction, facial trauma surgery, oral surgery, head and neck surgery, jaw surgery, facial aesthetic surgery, including cleft lip and cleft palate repair, and face plastic surgery. The current practice of plastic surgery and the United States' 1941 recognition of plastic surgery as a surgical specialty are both supported by oral and maxillofacial surgery. The American Association of Mouth and Plastic Surgery, a group of oral surgeons with advanced training and a passion for plastic and reconstructive surgery, founded plastic surgery in the early 1900s.
Email Id: surggenopen@peerjournal.org
Submission Link: https://www.longdom.org/submissions/surgery-current-research.html