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Query: UMLS:C0011168 (
dysphagia
)
15,644
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 68-year-old white woman was referred to us by her rheumatologist for possible participation in a clinical study of photopheresis for scleroderma. In February 1993, she noticed edema of her distal phalanges, Raynaud's phenomenon in both hands, flu-like symptoms, fatigue, intermittent diarrhea, abdominal pain, tearing in both eyes, dyspnea on exertion,
dysphagia
, and odynophagia. Bilateral silicone-gel breast implants had been placed 12 years before; 2 months before her present evaluation, they were removed and found to be ruptured. Physical examination revealed edema, limited to the fingers and hands bilaterally, and slight induration of the skin on the dorsum of both hands and distal forearms. The remainder of the physical examination was normal. According to our study protocol, a skin biopsy specimen from the dorsum of the right hand was taken, but all other laboratory investigations were refused. Histopathologic examination revealed multiple clear spaces of varying sizes in the dermis and multinucleated macrophages containing small refractile particles, characteristic of silicone granuloma (Figs. 1 and 2); however, the specimen showed no evidence of scleroderma. X-ray energy dispersive analysis by scanning electron-microscopy confirmed the presence of elemental
silicon
in the small refractile particles. The patient did not receive any treatment after her diagnosis and shortly thereafter, she was lost to follow-up.
...
PMID:Silicone granuloma in acral skin in a patient with silicone-gel breast implants and systemic sclerosis. 883 27
Today the number of women receiving breast implants of silicone gel, for augmentation or reconstruction of the breast, is increasing.
Silicon
implants may cause local complications (such as capsular contracture, rupture, closed capsulotomy, gel "bleed", nodular foreign body granulomas in the capsular tissue and lymph nodes) or general symptoms. An adverse immune reaction with signs and symptoms of rheumatoid disorders is also possible, although an increased frequency of true autoimmune systemic connective tissue diseases is controversial. The US Food and Drug Administration advised that these silicone implants should be used only in reconstructive surgery and as part of clinical trials. Silicone is not an inert substance and silicone compounds were found in the blood and liver of women with silicone breast implants. The development of disease related to silicone implants would depend on genetic factors, so that only a very few women are potentially at risk. HLA-DR53 may be a marker of predisposed subjects. Breast-feeding by women with silicone implants should not be recommended for possible autoimmune disorders in the children. We report the case of an adult female patient with silicone breast implantation for bilateral mastectomy (performed 12 months before) and a unique syndrome characterized by low-grade fever, chronic fatigue, arthralgias of the hands,
dysphagia
, dry eye, increased level of rheumatoid factor and decreased value of complement C3 and C4. No increased erythrocyte sedimentation rate occurred, and no ANA, nDNA, ENA and AAT autoantibodies were evidence. A critical review of literature (source: MEDLINE 1980-1997) was performed and our case seems to be the first one reported in Italy. The internist should become familiar with the immunological disorders related to silicone breast implants, often so marked to require the explantation of the prostheses to improve symptomatology. However, perhaps due to the leak and spreading of silicone, the progression to a severe systemic involvement may remain despite the implant removal.
...
PMID:[Silicone breast prosthesis and rheumatoid arthritis: a new systemic disease: siliconosis. A case report and a critical review of the literature]. 967 77
Reliable measurement tools are essential to achieve rigor in
dysphagia
research. In order for tongue pressure to be measured accurately in the head and neck cancer population, where change in function needs to be captured over time, a reliable tool is required. Assessing the reliability of tools that are used in swallowing evaluation has been a neglected area of
dysphagia
research. This article evaluates and compares the reliability of two variants of the Kay Swallowing Workstation (KSW) three-bulb
silicon
tongue pressure array (hand-held and fixed-position) when used to capture oral tongue pressures in two groups of participants diagnosed with head and neck cancer who had not yet commenced cancer treatment. Tongue pressure data and videofluoroscopic images were collected and recorded simultaneously onto the KSW while participants swallowed set quantities of liquid and pudding boluses. Peak amplitude tongue pressures were extracted and used in analyses. Systematic and nonsystematic variability were examined using analysis of variance and intraclass correlation coefficients, respectively. The fixed-position array demonstrated better reliability than did the hand-held method. This should be further investigated with a larger participant sample.
Dysphagia
2006 Jan
PMID:Comparison of two methods for measuring tongue pressure during swallowing in people with head and neck cancer. 1654 88
Benign tracheo-neo-esophageal fistula is a rare complication after esophagectomy. We report a 60-year-old man who presented 12 years after a McKeown esophagectomy with a fistula between the tracheal carina and the gastric conduit. In view of his severe sepsis and profound malnutrition, he underwent placement of a
silicon
Y-stent with a successful three-stage surgical repair consisting of duodenal exclusion with drainage gastrostomy. Six weeks later, the patient had closure of the fistula through a right thoracotomy. He finally underwent Roux-en-Y gastro-jejunostomy through a left thoraco-abdominal approach to restore the gastrointestinal continuity. Eighteen months postoperatively, he reports no
dysphagia
and has regained his premorbid weight.
...
PMID:Staged repair of benign tracheo-neo-esophageal fistula 12 years after esophagectomy for esophageal cancer. 2248 2
In cancer patients with tumors of the upper gastrointestinal tract,
dysphagia
and cachexia require gastrostomy or jejunostomy as the only options for enteral access for long-term feeding. In this article, the authors describe a modified placement of laparoscopic feeding jejunostomy applied during laparoscopic oncology layering technique. After performing an exploratory laparoscopy, a feeding jejunostomy is performed using a Foley
silicon
catheter, through an eyelet in the mesentery of the descending colon. After completing the introduction of the jejunal probe according to the Witzel technique, the intestinal segment of jejunum is attached to the internal sheath of the mesocolon using sutures polysorb 2/0, with the aim of removing the possible internal hernia and a jejunal torque that could cause an intestinal obstruction. There were no intraoperative complications or mortality. The technique described here provides most of the benefits of laparoscopic jejunostomy feeding, avoiding the possible internal hernia.
...
PMID:Laparoscopic surgical transmesocolic jejunostomy: A new surgical approach. 3002 85