1,721,043 research outputs found

    [Surgical resection of hepatic hilar tumors].

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    Hepatic hilar cancer has an extremely poor prognosis and resection for cure is a realistic possibility in only 15-20\% of patients. Tumours confined strictly to the biliary confluence can often be excised locally without resorting to hepatic resection (Bismuth's type I, II). Tumours extending beyond the second order bifurcation (Bismuth's type III) require hepatic resection. In the period 1996-1998 ten patients with hilar cancer (adenocarcinoma) underwent curative resection at our Institution. There were 9 men and 1 women with a mean age of 61.7 years (range 49-76 yrs). One neoplastic lesion was Bismuth's type I, five type II, four type III. The mean preoperative bilirubin level was 20 mg\% and the mean duration of jaundice was 4 weeks. Four patients had skeletonization resection of the tumour and extrahepatic bile ducts, clearing all lymphocellular and other tissue from the hepatic pedicle and coeliac axis. Bilioenteric continuity was reestablished by a Roux-en-Y jejunal loop with separate biliary duct anastomoses. Six patients required also hepatic resection to adequately remove the tumour (1 right hepatectomy, 2 right lobectomy, 2 left hepatectomy, 1 segmentectomy III). Three patients had liver metastases. One patient had involvement of the left arterial and portal branch. The postoperative staging was 2 stage II, 1 stage III, 7 stage IV. In 5 patients hepatic lymph nodes (N1) were involved. In no patient the tumour was found at the margin of resection. The median estimated blood loss for hepatic resection was 1,000 ml and for skeletonization 500 ml. Intraoperative mortality was 0\%. Operative mortality was 20\%. Three patients had a complicated postoperative course (1 cerebral TIA, 1 multiorgan failure, 1 ictus cerebri). All patients died. The mean postoperative survival was 7.4 months. Four patients (N1+) died of local tumour recurrence at 8, 11, 6, and 8 months. In our experience resective procedures can achieve a longer survival and a better quality of life. The operative mortality may be kept to a minimum by adequate selection of patients and technical expertise

    [Hepatic carcinoma in cirrhosis. Segmental liver resections].

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    Liver cirrhosis is frequently complicated by the onset of an hepatocellular carcinoma. An accurate monitoring of the cirrhotic patient often assures an early diagnosis, so that an hepatic resection is still possible. Hepatectomy has been accepted as the only chance of cure, but selection of the appropriate extent of surgery has to be made taking into account both the risk of postoperative hepatic failure and oncologic needs. Intraoperative sonography and intermittent hepatic vascular clamping lead to a safer liver resection, while the postoperative course is improved by monitoring the hepatic function and preventing sepsis. In the period November 1973-March 1991, 34 hepatic segmentectomies (unisegmentectomy 47\%, bisegmentectomy 38.3\%) were performed in our Service in cirrhotic patients with hepatocellular carcinoma. The clinical stage was defined using a modified Child-Bismuth's grading (A 67.6\%, B 32.4\%). In the majority of cases (53\%), tumors were less than 5 cm in diameter. Perioperative blood loss was less than 1,500 ml and fresh frozen plasma was preferred for volume substitution. The operative (one month) mortality rate was 20.5\%. Postoperative complications occurred in 45\% of cases. The mean survival rate was 14 months. The above results suggest early detection and curative resection as the best way to improve long term prognosis. Segmentectomy achieves a good balance between liver function preservation and radical exeresis. Postoperative intensive care is needed to prevent complications which might lead to hepatic failure

    Bench surgery and liver autotransplantation. Personal experience and technical considerations.

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    Advances in hepatic transplantation have opened the possibility of bench surgery for liver disease. Thus, nonconventional methods such as the ex vivo approach (bench procedure) or the in vivo ex situ preserved liver surgery have been performed in selected cases. These methods have been confined to situations and tumour stages otherwise deemed untreatable, or to situations where resection may not be sufficiently radical. To date, primary liver tumours (hepatocellular, cholangiocellular) and colo-rectal metastases are considered to be suitable conditions. The technique used is that of liver grafting. Hypothermic liver perfusion (U.W., 4 degrees C) and pump-driven veno-venous bypass from portal vein and inferior vena cava to the superior vena cava are performed. The principal aim of bench surgery is to avoid the unnecessary removal of a large amount of normal parenchyma. Resection lines follow the segmental structure of the liver. Sometimes, an atypical hepatectomy with a parenchymal exeresis "à la demande" is required. Authors' experience with four patients undergoing ex vivo operation of the liver (three patients) or surgery on an ex situ hypothermic perfused liver (one patient) is reported. The patients had liver metastases from colonic carcinoma (1 M, 2 F) and from renal carcinoma (1 M). Major hepatic resections were performed. One patient (M) died from neoplastic intestinal recurrence after 16 months. Two patients (F) died after 24 and 9 days for sepsis and pulmonary embolism. One patient (M) died intraoperatively from a massive retroperitoneal bleeding. Being able to remove otherwise unresectable hepatic neoplasms is a worthy objective. In the presence of diffuse chemoresistant colo-rectal hepatic metastases, liver bench surgery is a promising therapeutic hope. At the basis of a good hepatic function there are a correct organ preservation, a perfect bench surgical technique with respect for vascularization and biliary drainage of the hepatic remnant, and an accurate hemostasis of the resection surface

    [Extended lymphadenectomy for carcinoma of pancreatic head. Personal experience].

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    Long-term survival in patients with cancer of the pancreatic head is disappointing. Surgery is the only curative therapy. Unfortunately the prognosis of patients resected (10-15\%) is extremely poor due to loco-regional cancer recurrence (50\%). Lymphatic and perineural invasion might account for local recurrence. Japanese studies reported the importance of an extended lymphadenectomy during the classic Whipple exeresis (40\% of patients present lymph node metastases). During the period 1996-2000 at our Institution 20 patients (14 M, 6 F, mean age 62.4 years) with pancreatic head cancer (17 adenocarcinoma, 1 lymphoma, 2 carcinoma) underwent Whipple's exeresis with a regional (peripancreatic or R1) and juxta-regional (para-aortic or R2) lymphadenectomy according to Ishikawa technique. R1 nodes consisted of lymph nodes at the pylorus, superior head, common bile duct, anterior pancreaticoduodenal region, inferior head and superior mesenteric vessels. R2 nodes consisted of lymph nodes at the superior body, inferior body, mid colic region, common hepatic duct, coeliac truncus and para-aortic region. This wide dissection was quite easy also in patients with a serious cholestatic disease. Intraoperative mortality was 0\%. Operative mortality was 5\%. Postoperative complications (20\%) were 1 sepsis, 1 hepato-renal syndrome with hepatic coma, 1 mechanical intestinal obstruction, 1 wound infection. Eight patients (40\%) died in 6 months in average (neoplastic recurrence 40\%). Notwithstanding the advanced disease (stage III 50\%; N1+ 50\%), twelve patients (60\%) have a mean postoperative survival rate of 18.5 (range 1-48) months without neoplastic recurrence. Tumour diameter was less than 4 cm in 83.3\% of cases. An earlier diagnosis (with tumour diameter < 4 cm) can improve pancreatic head cancer prognosis. A wide surgical exeresis with a R2 lymph nodes clearance together with surrounding connective and nervous tissue can remove micrometastases with a better control local recurrence

    [Neoplastic obstruction of the vena cava inferior in general surgery].

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    Patients with primary or secondary tumoral occlusion of the inferior vena cava are difficult to be managed with safety and success. Nevertheless, their survival may be prolonged by an aggressive surgical approach according to the technical advances of liver transplantation. In fact, it is possible to perform a tumoral exeresis including the inferior vena cava by a total vascular exclusion of the liver (HVE) and a pump-driven veno-venous bypass (ECC). The Authors report the management of 8 patients with inferior caval tumoral involvement (8 M, 1 F, mean age 63.7 yrs). Vascular occlusion was caused by caval leiomyosarcoma (n 1), renal cell carcinoma (n 3), hepatocellular carcinoma (n 1), liver metastases (2 colorectal, 1 renal). Five patients (62.5\%) underwent surgical treatment (2 laparotomy, 2 wide nephrectomy with partial caval wall resection in HVE, 1 ex vivo liver resection with caval venoplasty in HVE and ECC). Operative mortality was 40\%. Three patients underwent medical treatment (radio-chemotherapy, chemoembolization). Total survival rate was 75\% at 3 months, 50\% at 6 months, and 25\% at 24 months. Two patients (25\%) are still alive at 3 months from the diagnosis and at 36 months from the operation

    [Radical surgical treatment of gastric cancer. Personal experience].

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    After surgical therapy the survival outcome of gastric cancer is still poor. Early diagnosis and radical surgery are the two most important means to improve the prognosis. Radical surgery must include all lymph nodes embryologically related to stomach. The aim of this study was to verify whether an aggressive surgical strategy can increase postoperative survival rate. In the period 1990-1994 eighty two patients with gastric cancer were operated on. The M:F ratio was 1.6:1 and the mean age was 65.3 years (range 23-89). Palliative operations (6 gastroenterostomy) were performed in 7.3\% of cases. In the other patients, 36 total gastrectomies (43.9\%), 8 total gastrectomies extended to spleen, pancreas and colon (9.7\%), 32 distal subtotal gastrectomies (39.1\%) were performed. Gastric exeresis was always associated with lymph node dissection extended to level I and II (R2). In some cases level III and IV lymphadenectomy (R3) was performed according to Maruyama-Mishima technique. There were no intraoperative deaths. The operative mortality was 13.6\% for total gastrectomies and 3.1\% for subtotal gastrectomies. Postoperative complications occurred in 15.9\% of total gastrectomies (3 anastomotic fistula, 2 wound infection, 1 subphrenic abscess, 1 melena) and in 3.1\% of subtotal gastrectomies (1 sepsis). Stage III and IV cancers represented 74.4\% of all cases (stage IIIA 19.6\%, IIIB 21.9\%, IV 32.9\%). Metastatic lymph node involvement (N2+) affected 53.1\% of T3 and 88.2\% of T4 cancers. The mean survival rate of patients subjected to gastroenterostomy was 6 months. The 2-year survival for total gastrectomies was 42\%, for subtotal gastrectomies 28.1\%. In our experience, wide removal of lymph nodes and total or extended gastrectomies were performed without any increase of mortality and morbidity. In advanced stages, a wider exeresis increased survival and prevented local recurrence

    [Surgical approach to posthepatitic cirrhotic patient today].

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    A posthepatitic cirrhotic patient may undergo elective or urgent abdominal operation for an extra-hepatic or hepatic disease. According to the high postoperative morbidity (61\%), surgery is indicated only for symptomatic or complicated cholelithiasis. A surgical procedure for refractory ascites has been devised to create a permanent peritoneo-venous shunt by a one way pressure-sensitive valve (Leveen). The procedure is simple and brings a long lasting relief with recovery in strength and nutrition and improved kidney function. Sclerotherapy is widely used to treat acute variceal bleeding while repeated sclerotherapy is used in the long-term management to eradicate varices. When indicated, liver transplantation is the best treatment to prevent variceal bleeding recurrence. Also portosystemic shunts effectively prevent recurrent variceal bleeding. They are, however, major operations with an important morbidity and mortality, particularly in poor risk patients. The most advocated shunts today are the Warren distal splenorenal shunt and the Sarfeh portacaval shunt using a small diameter prosthetic H-graft. The transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic stent-shunt (TIPSS) is a new treatment for portal hypertension and its complications. From a haemodynamic point of view it allows balanced hepatic perfusion. Postoperative mortality is rare; further bleeding and encephalopathy are reasonably acceptable. The most relevant complications concern dislocation of the prosthesis, stenosis and thrombosis of the shunt, which can be corrected by non-invasive dilatation. Encephalopathy is the main complication of surgical portosystemic shunts. It is usually controlled by protein diet restriction, and administration of lactulose or oral antibiotics. In severe forms the patients may be treated by an oesophageal transection with oesophagogastric devascularization, and by a postoperative suppression of the portosystemic shunt using external maneuvers. Posthepatitic liver cirrhosis is frequently complicated by the onset of an hepatocellular carcinoma. Early detection (aFP, DCP, Echography) and curative resection are the best ways to improve long term prognosis. Segmentectomy achieves a good balance between liver function preservation and radical exeresis for tumours less than 5 cm in diameter. Liver transplantation may be considered for the treatment of long-staging cirrhotic patients in whom hepatocarcinoma development has been recognized at an early presymptomatic stage. Hepatic arterial chemoembolization (gelfoam, lipiodol, mitomycin C or doxorubicin) may improve the survival of patients with unresectable malignant disease of the liver. A marked reduction in liver size may occur in the weeks following an effective chemoembolization with objective (CT scan) and subjective improvement (amelioration of specific symptoms). Liver chemoembolization is absolutely contraindicated in the presence of jaundice disordered liver function (Child C) or complete portal venous obstruction. In the last years, the number of patients treated by liver transplantation has greatly increased. Surgical technique, postoperative management, and immunosuppressive therapy account for the dramatic improvement of the results. However, indications for selection of patients and the timing for liver transplantation are still not well defined

    [The surgery of lung metastases of melanoma].

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    Melanoma is considered one of the most lethal cancers and surgical therapy of its pulmonary metastases is rarely indicated. The only hope for a successful surgical treatment of secondaries from melanoma is a radical resection. Considering the very frequent multiorgan involvement of melanoma metastases, surgery is usually possible in less than 5\% of cases. Nevertheless, in selected cases without lymph nodal involvement a 5-year survival rate of 31\% has been reported. In any way, it must be remembered that about 10\% of lung tumours thought to be metastases are primary cancers. In this occurrence surgery could be a rescuing solution. So, a pulmonary resection is always imperative when some diagnostic doubt exists

    [Hepatic cystadenoma: a case report].

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    Hepatic cystadenoma is a rare tumor arising from the biliary system. Although ultrasound and CT scan show peculiar features, diagnosis is not easy preoperatively. Because of the unreliable natural history of cystadenoma, total excision of the neoplasm by hepatic resection seems to be the treatment of choice. A case of benign cystadenoma treated by minor liver resection is reported
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