1. latrogenic injury to the phrenic nerve in infants perature or duration of bypass, suggesting that and young children;Mearns, A.J.;Br J Surg,1977
2. Diaphragmatic paralysis after pediatric cardiac surgery: a retrothoracotomies can increase the incidence of phrenic nerve paralysis.56 The presence of fibrous adhesions and scarring from previous operation would obscure the anatomy of the spective analysis of 34 cases;Lynn, A.M.; Jenkins, J.G.; Edmonds, J.F.; Burns, J.E.;Crit Care Med,1983
3. Phrenic nerve paralysis after pediatric cardiac surgery: retrospective study of 125 cases;Watanabe, T.; Trusler, G.A.; Williams, W.G.; Edmonds, J.F.; Coles, J.G.; Hosokawa, Y.;J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg,1987
4. Phrenic nerve injury complicating closed cardioconsidered separately. The reason for this is unclear but it could be that a combination of vascular surgical procedures for congenital heart disease;Zhao, H.X.; D'Agostino, R.S.; Pitlick, P.T.; Shumway, N.E.; Miller, D.C.,1985
5. Phrenic nerve conduction in man. JNeurol more demanding bypass surgery and scarring from previous operations contributed to the higher risk. A closer examination of the data in references 5 and 6 bears this out because the association of phrenic nerve injury with previous thoracotomies was found only among Neurosurg;J, Newsom Davis;Psychiatry,1967