Overview
Emergency surgery is operative intervention performed without delay to treat an acute, life- or limb-threatening condition, where postponement would risk irreversible harm or death. It is distinguished from elective surgery by its unscheduled nature, compressed preoperative assessment, and the frequent need to operate before a complete diagnostic workup is possible. Common indications span abdominal catastrophes such as perforation, obstruction, ischaemia, uncontrolled haemorrhage, and complicated appendicitis; obstetric emergencies including emergency caesarean delivery; penetrating and blunt trauma; and acute infection requiring source control. Decision-making balances rapid resuscitation, physiological stabilisation, and the timing of intervention, while anticipating higher complication and mortality rates than in planned operations. The work gathered here reflects this breadth: restoration of bowel continuity after an emergency Hartmann's procedure, prerequisites for emergency laparoscopic surgery in colorectal cancer, management of orbitocranial foreign-body injury, emergency caesarean outcomes and associated surgical-site infection, and the disruption of surgical practice during the COVID-19 pandemic. Cross-cutting concerns include access to timely operative care, task-sharing in resource-limited settings, perioperative infection prevention, fluid management, and post-operative recovery. As a discipline, emergency surgery integrates acute care surgery, trauma management, and critical care to deliver definitive treatment under time pressure.
Research published in this journal
9 peer-reviewed articles, ranked by relevance. Each links to its DOI.
Prerequisites for Emergency Laparoscopic Surgery for Colorectal Cancer
The Effect of Covid-19 Pandemic on Surgical Practice in Nigeria
Rate, Maternal and Fetal Outcome of Cesarean Delivery Performed by IESO at Shenen Gibe General Hospital, Jimma South West Ethiopia: A Descriptive Retrospective Data
A Case of an Orbitocranial Injury with an Unusual Foreign Object
Surgical Site Infection in Cesarean Section Operation: Risk and Management
The Role of Cerebral Hypercarbia in the Induction of the Near-Death Experience
Causes and Consequences of the Syndrome of Excessive Bacterial Growth in the Small Intestine
How this research is being cited
The 9 articles above have been cited 10 times in the scholarly literature. Citation data via OpenAlex and Crossref, updated Jun 2026.
-
2025 ·
-
Aditya Gan et al. · 2024 · Maternal-Fetal Medicine
-
2023 · Journal of Complementary and Integrative Medicine
-
2023 · BMC Women's Health
-
2023 · BMC Women s Health
-
2023 · Jurnal Penelitian Pendidikan IPA
-
2023 · Journal of Complementary and Integrative Medicine
-
2021 · Jurnal Biomedika dan Kesehatan
A sample of recent works citing this journal's research on Emergency Surgery, linking to each citing work.