411 - Staged Abdominal Wall Reconstruction

C E E X A M Earn CE Credits at Home You will be awarded continuing educa- tion (CE) credits toward your recertifica- tion after reading the designated arti- cle and completing the test with a score of 70% or better. If you do not pass the test, it will be returned along with your payment. Send the original answer sheet from the journal and make a copy for your records. If possible use a credit card (debit or credit) for payment. It is a faster option for processing of credits and offers more flexibility for correct payment. When submitting multiple tests, you do not need to submit a separate check for each journal test. You may submit multiple journal tests with one check or money order. Members this test is also available online at www.ast.org . No stamps or checks and it posts to your record automatically! Members: $6 per credit (per credit not per test) Nonmembers: $10 per credit (per credit not per test plus the $400 nonmember fee per submission) After your credits are processed, AST will send you a letter acknowledging the number of credits that were accepted. Members can also check your CE credit status online with your login information at www.ast.org. 3 WAYS TO SUBMIT YOUR CE CREDITS Mail to: AST, Member Services, 6 West Dry Creek Circle Ste 200, Littleton, CO 80120-8031 Fax CE credits to: 303-694-9169 E-mail scanned CE credits in PDF format to: [email protected] For questions please contact Member Services - [email protected] or 800-637-7433, option 3. Business hours: Mon-Fri, 8:00a.m. - 4:30 p.m., MT abdominal wall, often with loss of domain and/or infected prosthetic mesh. This advanced operation is performed in efforts to control the patient’s her- nia disease and, hopefully, to provide an improvement in the patient’s quality of life. There are a relatively large number of patients suffering from chronic illness due to previous failed herniorrhaphy and the resultant gigantic inci- sional hernia, often with a concurrent compromised prosthetic mesh. A U T H O R A C K N O W L E D G E M E N T I would like to offer a special thanks to Nicholas Armstrong, MD, FACS, of Milwaukee, Wisconsin, (who is a major authority on hernia corrective procedures), for taking the time to consult with me and for reviewing and helping to edit this article. R E F E R E N C E S 1. Clemente, C D.Anatomy: A Regional Atlas of the Human Body. 4th.Media:Williams &Wilkins, 1997. 2. Oakes, D. Hernias. Niederhuber, John E. Fundamentals of Surgery. 1st. Stamford: Appleton & Lange, 1998. 390-401. 3. Venes,Donald.Taber’s CyclopedicMedical Dictionary.Ed.MDDonaldVenes.21st.Philadelphia: FA Davis Company, 2005. 4. Drugs.com.Indocyanine Green.2017.Drugs.com.Accessed January 5,2017. https://www.drugs . com/pro/indocyanine-green.html 5. Beers, M H. Merck Manual of Diagnosis and Therapy. Ed. 18th.Whitehouse Station: Merck Research Laboratories, 2006. 6. Nahabedian, MY. Panniculectomy and AbdominalWall Reconstruction. Rosen, Michael J.Atlas of Abdominal Wall Reconstruction. Ed. Michael J. Rosen. Philadelphia: Saunders, an imprint of Elssevier Inc, 2012. 204-223. 7. Novadaq Technologies, Inc. SP Elite Product Brochure. 2016. Novadaq.com. 13 December 2016. http://novadaq.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/09/MS-0330-SPY-Elite-Product-Bro- chure-2016.pdf 8. Robbins, S L; Ramzi S. Cotran andVinay Kumar. Pathologic Basis of Disease. 3rd.W.B. Saunders Company, 1984. 9. Silverman, Ronald P. Open Component Separation. Rosen, Michael J.Atlas of Abdominal Wall Reconstruction. Ed. Michael J. Rosen. Philadelphia: Saundersan imprint of Elsevier Inc., 2012. 131-138 | The Surgical Technologist | MARCH 2018 114

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