Abstract

Surgery is an invasive form of treatment and must be a ‘last resort’. Research into conditions that can be treated by surgery aims to make it extinct, by discovering the basis for various disease processes and treating them medically. A prime example of this is peptic ulceration, which was the ‘bread and butter’ of surgical training in the UK in the 1970s and 1980s, but is now a condition that has almost vanished from the surgical lexicon with the discovery of Helicobacter pylori and its treatment by triple therapy and proton pump inhibitors. In the ‘molecular age’, there is a strong possibility that other areas of surgery (which currently keep many surgeons occupied) will also diminish in volume and importance. Further, it would be worth looking briefly at a number of different specialties within surgery and speculating where changes may occur in the future, perhaps making operations less necessary. In those areas where molecular advances have not (or will not) eradicate open surgery, there will be a definite tendency towards minimally invasive procedures, even though the introduction of such procedures is seldom evidence based.

Full Text
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