Michael R. Marohn
Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences
5 Papers
110 Citations
Michael R. Marohn is an academic researcher from Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cholecystectomy & Retrospective cohort study. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 5 publications. Previous affiliations of Michael R. Marohn include Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine.
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Papers
An external audit of laparoscopic cholecystectomy performed in medical treatment facilities of the department of Defense.
TL;DR: The Frequency of complications found in this study is comparable to the frequency of complications reported in recent large civilian studies and earlier, smaller studies, and a system for classifying and comparing the severity of bile duct injuries is presented.
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Laparoscopic Total Abdominal Colectomy in the Acute Setting
Michael R. Marohn,Michael R. Marohn,Eric J. Hanly,Eric J. Hanly,Kevin J. McKenna,Carmen R. Varin +5 more
TL;DR: Laparoscopic total abdominal colectomy is technically challenging and requires a team approach but offers patients significant benefit in length of stay and surgical recovery and lessons learned from the team experience are reported.
25
Twenty-first century surgery using twenty-first century technology: surgical robotics.
TL;DR: An analysis of current surgical technology and skills is provided, criteria for what the next generation of surgical instruments and technology should achieve are proposed, and the evolution and current state of surgical robotic solutions are examined, assessing how they answer future surgical needs.
An external audit of laparoscopic cholecystectomy in the steady state performed in medical treatment facilities of the Department of Defense.
TL;DR: In the steady state, despite an increase in the percentage of laparoscopic cholecystectomies performed for nonmalignant gallbladder disease, there continues to be minimal complications and low mortality.
Evaluation of total/near-total thyroidectomy in a short-stay hospitalization: safe and cost-effective.
TL;DR: Serial serum calcium determinations used to construct a three-point calcium curve at 20 hours after operation can reliably and safely identify patients at risk to have clinically significant hypocalcemia.