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Query: UMLS:C0001430 (
adenoma
)
21,222
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Three hundred and fifty-one consecutive prostatectomies have been carried out using a combined suprapubic approach for the enucleation of the
adenoma
and a transurethral approach to control bleeding. Removal of any residual tissue in the prostatic fossa and removal of a wedge from the bladder neck are done with the resectoscope. The procedure is
reserved
for larger adenomas not suitable for transurethral resection.
...
PMID:Suprapubic prostatectomy--combined technique. 619 42
Analysis of a series of 205 surgically treated cases of primary hyperparathyroidism was carried out to assess the long-term results of the conservative approach of selectively removing the
adenoma
only. If primary hyperparathyroidism is due to multiple gland involvement in one-third to one-half of patients, an appreciable number of patients with recurrent disease should have been encountered during this study of the results of conservative no instances of permanent tetany, supports the conservative approach to the treatment when only a single enlarged gland is encountered. Subtotal parathyroidectomy should be
reserved
for those few cases in which multiple enlarged glands are found, especially in association with multiple endocrine neoplasm, familial hyperparathyroidism, and secondary hyperparathyroidism.
...
PMID:Primary hyperparathyroidism: the case for conservative surgery. 738 86
Minor salivary gland tumors of the palate are rare and may pose a diagnostic and therapeutic dilemma for the head and neck surgeon. The authors reviewed their 46 years of experience with minor salivary gland tumors of the palate to determine the factors that influence outcome and their implications for treatment. Malignant tumors were seen in 116 patients (78%) and benign tumors were found in 33 patients (22%). Adenoid cystic carcinoma was the most common malignant tumor, occurring in 43 patients, and pleomorphic
adenoma
was the most common benign tumor, occurring in 30 patients. Univariate analysis on the malignant lesions showed that grade 3 tumor histology (P < .001), tumor size greater than 3 cm (P < .001), perineural invasion (P = .031), bone invasion (P = .012), positive surgical margins (P < .001), and positive initial but negative final margins (P = .004) were all associated with decreased survival. With multivariate analysis, tumor size, margin status, and grade were shown to be independently associated with decreased survival (P < .05). The recurrence rate at the primary site was significantly higher for adenoid cystic carcinoma than for other histologies (P = .0059). The 2-, 5-, and 10-year disease-specific survival rates for patients with malignant disease were 96%, 87%, and 80%, respectively. Wide surgical excision with adequate margins is essential for a favorable outcome in patients with malignant minor salivary gland tumors. Postoperative radiotherapy is
reserved
for patients with grade 3 tumor histology, large primary lesions, perineural invasion, bone invasion, cervical lymph node metastasis, and positive margins, although a clear-cut survival advantage has not been proven. Recurrence, especially regional and distant metastasis, portends an extremely poor prognosis.
...
PMID:Minor salivary gland tumors of the palate: clinical and pathologic correlates of outcome. 747 67
Surgery for symptomatic hyperparathyroidism remains the standard therapy. Asymptomatic primary hyperparathyroidism (pHPT) is being diagnosed with increasing frequency owing to broad serum testing. Indications for surgery in this setting are controversial. For evaluation of surgical safety we performed a retrospective analysis of our patients who were being operated on for asymptomatic pHPT. From January 1988 until August 1995, 243 patients were treated for pHPT and registered prospectively at our unit. Seventy-six patients were classified as asymptomatic. In all, 75% of the patients were female; the mean age was 62 years. In this group, 87% of the patients had cervical sonography in order to localize the
adenoma
. Highly selective venous catheterization was required in cervical reexplorations. Statistical analysis for potential prognostic factors for the clinical outcome was performed. Successful cervical exploration was possible in 71 patients (94.7%). With 4 patients remaining hypercalcemic, the rate of persistency was 5.2%. Localization procedures were correct in 58% for cervical ultrasound and 77% for selective venous catheterization. Postoperative morbidity included one permanent recurrent laryngeal nerve palsy and 2 patients with hemorrhage who were treated by reoperation. While one case of permanent hypoparathyroidism was well controlled by oral supplementation, 18 patients recovered from temporary hypoparathyroidism. No postoperative mortality occurred. Risk factor analysis revealed only cervical reexplorations for HPT to be associated with a higher morbidity (P = 0.02). Surgery for asymptomatic pHPT can be performed with reasonable safety. Cervical reexplorations in asymptomatic patients should be
reserved
for special indications. Apart from this small group, all patients should be evaluated for surgery.
...
PMID:[Outcome of surgical therapy in asymptomatic primary hyperparathyroidism]. 915 80
Considerable controversy exists regarding the ability to predict the biologic behavior of Hurthle cell tumors. Some have found the clinicopathologic criteria used to differentiate benign from malignant lesions to be unreliable and have advocated total thyroidectomy for all Hurthle cell neoplasms. From January 1980 to December 1995, 39 patients had surgery for Hurthle cell tumors of the thyroid. The surgical pathologic findings were reviewed by an experienced pathologist (JP). Eight patients had histologic findings of capsular or vascular invasion consistent with carcinoma and had total thyroidectomy. Four of these patients had postoperative evidence of residual disease and were treated by radiation ablation. No evidence of invasion was found in 31 patients diagnosed with Hurthle cell adenoma. Twenty-three of these patients had unilateral lobectomy; total thyroidectomy was done in the remaining 8 patients, 5 of whom were found to have an associated papillary carcinoma at the time of operation. There were no operative deaths or significant morbidity. Twenty-two adenomas (71%) were found in females, whereas males had malignant tumors in 6 of 8 cases (P = 0.025). The mean age of
adenoma
patients is 54.1 years, and that of the carcinoma patients is 55.8 years. Mean size of benign tumors was 2.8 cm and of malignant tumors 4.1 cm (P = 0.04). Four of seven (57%) carcinomas were larger than 4 cm as compared with 6 of 30 (20%) adenomas (P = 0.069). Follow-up has ranged from 1 month to 15 years, with a mean of 3.2 years. There have been no deaths, and no patients with Hurthle cell adenoma have had evidence of recurrence or metastases during follow-up. Our data suggest that carcinoma patients tend to be male and tumor size is larger. An association was found when trying to predict malignancy by using 4 cm as a threshold size. We conclude that pathologic evidence of capsular or angioinvasion can accurately differentiate benign from malignant tumors. Unilateral thyroid lobectomy is adequate therapy for the treatment of Hurthle cell adenoma, with total thyroidectomy
reserved
for those patients with histologically proven carcinoma.
...
PMID:Unilateral lobectomy for Hurthle cell adenoma. 969 1
The experience of the surgeon and precise localization of abnormal parathyroid glands determine the success of surgery for primary hyperparathyroidism (HPT). In HPT patients undergoing repeat surgery, the use of localization studies improved the ability to identify the remaining abnormal parathyroid tissue. This study investigated the roles of preoperative localization techniques for initial surgery for primary HPT. From 1985 through 1997, two noninvasive localization procedures, ultrasonography (US) and 201thallium chloride-99mtechnetium pertechnetate subtraction scanning (Tl-Tc), were used prior to initial exploration for primary HPT in 76 patients. Their accuracy was determined on the basis of surgical and pathologic results. The surgical success rate was 96% (73/76). The sensitivities of US and Tl-Tc were 71% and 49%, respectively. The sensitivity of Tl-Tc was higher for the lower parathyroid glands. In 21 of 26 patients who underwent fine-needle aspiration (FNA) of the suspected enlarged parathyroid gland, the diagnosis of parathyroid
adenoma
was confirmed preoperatively. We conclude that the concomitant use of US and FNA is a safe and convenient method for preoperative localization of the parathyroid glands prior to initial surgical exploration in patients with primary HPT. Bilateral neck exploration by an experienced surgeon should be the routine procedure. US and Tl-Tc alone offer limited localization information, and unilateral exploration should be
reserved
for selected cases in which the results of these two imaging studies are consistent with one another.
...
PMID:Preoperative localization procedures for initial surgery in primary hyperparathyroidism. 983 Feb 77
Small thyroid carcinomas (< or = 1.5 cm), including microcarcinomas (< or = 1.0 cm) (n = 39), were found in 53 patients (41%) with a papillary (n = 130) and in 4 cases (4%) with a follicular (n = 110) carcinoma. The tumour was clinically manifested by palpability or by the presence of nodal metastases in 1/3 of patients. Concomitant diagnoses were colloid goitre (n = 24), cellular
adenoma
(n = 11), Graves' disease (n = 6), and Hashimoto's thyroiditis (n = 4). Nodal involvement, multifocal tumour, and extrathyroidal extent (pT4) were present in 9%, 19%, and 8% of cases respectively. Small follicular carcinomas were minimally invasive in all instances. According to the age-related prognostic TNM-classification, 52 patients (91%) were in the low risk category. 18% of the patients underwent uni- or bilateral partial lobectomy, 35% hemithyroidectomy, and 47% total thyroidectomy, according to the extent and nature of the concomitant benign disease, whereas hemi- or total thyroidectomy was performed in the patients with known cancer. Four of 5 patients with stage pT4 cancer and all patients with nodal involvement underwent total thyroidectomy with radioiodine (n = 8 [14%]). Postoperative morbidity was 0%. During the follow-up period of 1-17 (x = 5.5) years no tumour-related death and no serious recurrence was noted. One node recurrence was removed 1 year following treatment of a stage III pT1aN1b papillary carcinoma; the patient died 4 years later accidentally without residual disease. These results confirm that cases with a potentially favourable course can be defined and treated selectively by less radical measures. Small carcinomas (< or = 1.5 cm) belong to these favourable tumours with a cancer mortality rate of virtually 0%, and the aim of treatment is to prevent curable recurrences: node positivity is an important risk factor, and therefore radioiodine is
reserved
for carcinomas with nodal involvement and also for the occasional small pT4-tumour.
...
PMID:[Small thyroid carcinomas: biological characteristics, diagnosis and therapy]. 1040 41
The reported cases of hyperthyroidism due to a TSH-secreting pituitary adenoma have steadily increased in previous years; however, information about the results and long term outcome after pituitary surgery is scanty. Twenty-four patients with a TSH-secreting
adenoma
underwent pituitary surgery at our department in the last 15 years. Hypersecretion of other pituitary hormones was diagnosed in 7 patients. Three patients were euthyroid at the time of surgery because of previous ablative thyroid therapies. The success rate of surgery strictly depends on the criteria used. Normalization of elevated FT3 and FT4 levels occurred in 17 of the 21 patients with preoperative hyperthyroidism: however, only those with early postoperative undetectable TSH level (12 cases) had no recurrence of disease during follow-up and no residual tumor tissue on postoperative MRI, whereas recurrence of hyperthyroidism occurred in 3 of the 5 patients without postoperative TSH inhibition. All 3 euthyroid patients had a subtotal removal of the tumor, as judged by postoperative MRI. Surgical removal is the therapy of choice of TSH-secreting adenomas, whereas radiotherapy and medical treatment with somatostatin analogues are usually
reserved
to patients with incomplete tumor removal. A thorough postoperative evaluation is necessary to discriminate between complete and partial remission of disease.
...
PMID:Surgical management of thyrotropin-secreting pituitary adenomas. 1108 Nov 63
We retrospectively evaluated the cases of 55 patients who had undergone surgery for primary hyperparathyroidism at our institution to determine whether their parathyroid glands were abnormal on both sides. Thirty-six of these patients had undergone a bilateral neck exploration, and 19 had had a unilateral investigation. Of the 36 bilaterally explored patients, 30 had a solitary
adenoma
and no parathyroid pathology on the opposite side, five patients had hyperplastic glands with more than one gland involved, and one patient had two adenomas. In the unilaterally explored group, all 19 patients had a solitary
adenoma
. There were no failures in the way of persistent hypercalcemia in either group. Based on our findings, we conclude that a unilateral neck exploration should be performed during surgery for primary hyperparathyroidism whenever a large parathyroid
adenoma
and a normal parathyroid gland are found on the same side. Bilateral exploration should be
reserved
for patients in whom pathology cannot be found on the initially explored side during surgery and for patients who have obvious parathyroid hyperplasia.
...
PMID:Unilateral versus bilateral neck exploration in parathyroid surgery: an assessment of 55 cases. 1152 70
Brunner's gland hamartoma (
adenoma
) was first described in 1876. It is a rare hamartomatous lesion, with only 100 cases reported in the world literature. Treatment has been by endoscopic snaring. Open surgical excision was
reserved
for cases where snaring had failed. We report a case of a Brunner's gland hamartoma (2.4 cm) that was successfully resected by laparoscopic techniques. Postoperative hospital stay was brief (2 days), and there were no complications. This is the second reported case to be resected laparoscopically.
...
PMID:Laparoscopic excision of a Brunner's gland hamartoma of the duodenum. 1219 95
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