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1. Penetrating colon trauma – outcomes related to single versus multiple colonic injuries.

2. Penetrating Colon Trauma—the Effect of Injury Location on Outcomes.

3. The Hybrid Electronic Medical Registry Allows Benchmarking of Quality of Trauma Care: A Five-Year Temporal Overview of the Trauma Burden at a Major Trauma Centre in South Africa.

4. Preparing Japanese surgeons for potential mass casualty situations will require innovative and systematic programs.

5. Civilian cerebral gunshot wounds in rural South African patients are associated with significantly higher mortality rates than in urban patients.

6. Traumatic tension pneumothorax: experience from 115 consecutive patients in a trauma service in South Africa.

7. The accuracy of physical examination in identifying significant pathologies in penetrating thoracic trauma.

8. Open pneumothorax: the spectrum and outcome of management based on Advanced Trauma Life Support recommendations.

9. Retained weapon injuries: experience from a civilian metropolitan trauma service in South Africa.

10. The selective conservative management of small traumatic pneumothoraces following stab injuries is safe: experience from a high-volume trauma service in South Africa.

11. AAST grade of liver injury is not the single most important consideration in decision making for liver trauma.

12. Post-traumatic stress disorder in international surgeons undertaking trauma electives in a South African trauma centre.

13. Management of thoracoabdominal gunshot wounds - Experience from a major trauma centre in South Africa.

14. Penetrating buttock trauma is morbid but rarely fatal - A South African experience.

15. Abdominal stab wounds with retained knife: 15 years of experience from a major trauma centre in South Africa.

16. Laparotomy for Abdominal Stab Wound With Combined Omental and Organ Evisceration: 10-Year Experience From a Major Trauma Centre in South Africa.

17. Broad responses and attitudes to having music in surgery (the BRAHMS study) - a South African perspective.

18. The neglected epidemic of trauma from interpersonal violence against the elderly in South Africa.

19. Experience and perceptions of laparoscopic appendectomy amongst surgical trainees in South Africa.

20. The Management of Penetrating Neck Injury With Retained Knife: 15-Year Experience From a Major Trauma Center in South Africa.

21. An audit of trauma laparotomy in children and adolescents highlights the role of damage control surgery and the need for a trauma systems approach to injury in this vulnerable population.

22. Trends in the Management of Abdominal Gunshot Wounds Over the Last Decade: A South African Experience.

23. Trends in Adoption of Laparoscopic Appendicectomy in a Developing Country: Closing the Gap.

24. Laparotomy for penetrating gastric trauma - A South African experience.

25. Management of penetrating thoracic trauma with retained knife blade: 15-year experience from a major trauma centre in South Africa.

26. The quest to improve outcomes for abdominal wall incisional hernia repair in Pietermaritzburg: between Scylla and Charybdis.

27. Childhood and adolescent trauma in Pietermaritzburg is a neglected sub-epidemic within a larger epidemic and warrants a dedicated service.

28. The correlation between full moon and admission volume for penetrating injuries at a major trauma centre in South Africa.

29. The spectrum of blunt abdominal trauma in Pietermaritzburg.

30. Retrospective cohort study of paediatric splenic injuries at a major adult trauma centre in South Africa identifies areas of success and improvement.

31. Recurrent pneumothorax following chest tube removal in thoracic stab wounds: a comparative study between end inspiratory versus end expiratory removal techniques at a major trauma centre in South Africa.

32. A review of blunt pelvic injuries at a major trauma centre in South Africa.

33. Radiographic pneumoperitoneum following abdominal stab wound is not an absolute indication for mandatory laparotomy - A South African experience.

34. Damage Control Laparotomy: High-Volume Centers Display Similar Mortality Rates Despite Differences in Country Income Level.

35. Predictors of the need for surgery in upper gastrointestinal bleeding in a resource constrained setting: the Pietermaritzburg experience.

36. The scourge of knife crime: trends in knife-related assault managed at a major centre in South Africa.

37. Trauma in pregnancy at a major trauma centre in South Africa.

38. Contemporary management of rectal trauma - A South African experience.

39. Hanging-related injury in Pietermaritzburg, South Africa.

40. Penetrating trauma in children and adolescents in Pietermaritzburg.

41. Developing a blueprint for a civilian-military collaborative program in trauma training for Northern European countries: A South African experience.

42. Traumatic renal injury: Five-year experience at a major trauma centre in South Africa.

43. A review of geriatric injuries at a major trauma centre in South Africa.

44. Compliance with the Surviving Sepsis Campaign guidelines for early resuscitation does not translate into improved outcomes in patients with surgical sepsis in South Africa.

45. Contrast-induced nephropathy following CT scan for trauma is not rare and is associated with increased mortality in South African trauma patients.

46. Discrepancy in clinical outcomes of patients with gunshot wounds in car hijacking: a South African experience.

47. Primary repair of duodenal injuries: a retrospective cohort study from a major trauma centre in South Africa.

48. The spectrum of animal related injuries managed at a major trauma centre in South Africa.

49. Analysis of Surgical Adverse Events at a Major University Hospital in South Africa.

50. An analysis of adverse events and human error associated with the imaging of patients at a major trauma centre in South Africa.

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