1,720,980 research outputs found

    Thyroid surgery in day hospital?

    No full text
    Feasibility of thyroid surgery without making use of drains and in one day hospital stay is verified in a selected series of 43 patients (13,6% of thyroidectomies performed in a year). Data suggest that lobectomies are the procedures that can be safely carried out with this aim, while total and subtotal thyroidectomies need longer observation because of possible hypocalcemic manifestations or localized serum-haematic collections in the thyroid bed. With an adequate organization, all the thyroid surgical procedures can be early discharged but after one day stay, because of general anesthesia, and only in highly selected cases

    Reoperation in differentiated carcinoma of the thyroid gland

    No full text
    A series of 112 patients reoperated on for differentiated thyroid cancer is analyzed; 60 patients (38 with papillary and 22 with follicular cancer) underwent ex-principio to completion of a non total thyroidectomy and 52 (37 with papillary and 15 with follicular cancer) to repeat surgery for local relapse. At a mean follow-up of 8.7 years, all the 38 patients with papillary cancer reoperated on for completion are alive and disease-free, while of those with follicular cancer 4 are dead, 2 are alive with carcinoma and 16 (72.7%) are disease free. A reoperation for relapse was performed on the thyroid in 11, on the thyroid and nodes in 23 patients (all had initially received partial thyroidectomy), and on nodes alone in 28 patients. At a mean follow-up of 10.2 years, 20 patients (54%) with papillary and 7 (46.6%) with follicular cancer are alive and disease-free, 8 patients with papillary and 1 with follicular cancer are alive with disease and the remainder are dead due to the tumour. Although there is no sure evidence that total thyroidectomy provides higher survival and fewer recurrences, since many factors, predominantly age influence the prognosis, total thyroidectomy is recommended as a minimal procedure to avoid less safe and less radical subsequent reoperation

    Role of transarterial Chemoembolization Befero Liver Resection For Hepatocarcinoma

    No full text
    The aim of this study was to clarify whether chemoembolization (TACE) before liver resection (LR) can reduce postoperative hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) recurrence and improve disease-free and overall survival. Eighty-nine patients with tumor-stage (TNM) I-II HCC were evaluated for LR. Patients were prospectively allocated to LR alone or TACE plus LR based on their place of residence. Twenty nonlocal patients (24%) were selected for LR, while 69 (77.5%) local patients were selected for TACE plus LR. Following TACE, the tumor stage could be confirmed in only 20 patients (29%) who then underwent LR. Operative mortality was 0%, but in the TACE-LR group, 3 patients died of liver failure between 2 and 5 months after surgery. Early recurrence (<24 months) was 59% for LR versus 20% for TACE plus LR (P <.05). Late recurrence was 18% for LR versus 10% for TACE plus LR (P = not significant [NS]). The overall recurrence rate was 76% for LR versus 30% for TACE plus LR (P <.02). Death due to HCC recurrence was 70% for LR versus 15% for TACE plus LR (P <.05). The overall 1- and 5-year survival rates did not differ significantly (71% to 38% for LR v 85% to 43% for TACE + LR; P = NS), whereas the difference in 1- and 5-year disease-free survival was highly significant (64% to 21% for LR v 82% to 57% for TACE + LR; P <.02). TACE was able to improve the HCC staging process and significantly reduce the incidence of early and overall HCC recurrence and related death after LR; it improved the disease-free interval, but not the overall survival, due to an increase in liver failure in the first 5 months
    corecore