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Query: UMLS:C0018801 (
heart failure
)
72,216
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Fifty-four patients have undergone abdominocervical oesophagectomy for oesophageal carcinoma as an alternative to a conventional transthoracic approach. Their median age was 69 years, with a range of 38-90 years, and 39 per cent of patients had chronic cardiorespiratory disease. Lymph node metastases were found in 80 per cent of patients and transmural tumour spread in 91 per cent. Median duration of operation was 2.2 h (range 1.75-6.0 h), and median transfusion requirement was 2.5 units (range 0-8 units). Respiratory complications were common (41 per cent) and caused all six postoperative deaths (11 per cent). Other complications were atrial fibrillation (26 per cent), transient recurrent laryngeal nerve palsy (11 per cent),
cardiac failure
(2 per cent), stroke (2 per cent),
subphrenic abscess
(2 per cent) and empyema (2 per cent). There were two anastomotic leaks (4 per cent), clinically manifest as temporary salivary fistulae. There have been 32 deaths from recurrent carcinoma, with a median duration of survival of 14 months (range 4-53 months). Fifteen patients are still alive, with a median survival of 16.5 months (range 3-49 months); the current 3-year survival rate is 10 per cent. All patients resumed normal swallowing after operation, but 11 of them developed anastomotic strictures requiring a median of three dilatations. Avoidance of formal thoracotomy by the abdominocervical approach may allow more rapid oesophagectomy without increasing the risk of postoperative death and gives a quality of palliation at least equivalent to that of conventional transthoracic oesophageal excision.
...
PMID:Abdominocervical (transhiatal) oesophagectomy in the management of oesophageal carcinoma. 169 13
Twelve cases of splenic abscess, seen at our hospital between January 1980 and June 1987, were reviewed retrospectively. The most common causes of splenic abscesses were subacute endocarditis and intra abdominal sepsis. Diagnosis was suspected on clinical grounds and was always confirmed by sonography and/or computerized tomography. Two patients were drained unsuccessfully under CT scan guidance and underwent splenectomy. The other patients were operated primarily. One patient developed a
subphrenic abscess
postoperatively. One patient died from intractable
cardiac failure
due to subacute endocarditis. The authors stress the role of CT scan in the diagnosis of splenic abscess and recommend early splenectomy in cases of failure of percutaneous drainage.
...
PMID:[Abscess of the spleen: diagnosis and treatment. Apropos of 12 cases]. 265 68
Endoscopic sphincterotomy is an available nonoperative alternative treatment for recurrent or residual common bile duct stones. Nevertheless, immediate, intraoperative and definitive treatment is needed in patients with common duct stones and other pathologies that are prone to develop into such complications, which is important especially in aged high-risk patients during recurrent operations and nonoperative instrumental interventions. To evaluate the safety of choledochoduodenostomy in elderly patients, we reviewed our experience with 55 patients over the age of 70 years with benign biliary tract diseases. Even though the majority of patients (69%) had obstructive jaundice and were operated on urgently, there was one death (1.8%) due to
cardiac failure
, and nine (16.3%) early postoperative complications including
subphrenic abscess
, disruption of wound and pneumonia (one case of each), wound infection (three cases) and urinary tract infections (three cases). There were no complications related to the procedure itself. In a follow-up period of one to 12 years, neither cholangitis nor sump syndrome were documented.
...
PMID:Choledochoduodenostomy for benign biliary tract disease in the elderly. 368 62
This report describes the mortality in 100 liver resections performed in 96 patients for seven benign and 93 malignant liver tumours. Repeat hepatectomy was performed in four patients who developed recurrences after the first liver resection. Two patients died within 30 days. The first was a 67-year-old man who died on the 2nd postoperative day from
cardiac failure
. The second was a 69-year-old man who died on the 4th postoperative day with liver failure caused by hepatic vascular ischaemia. There were four other hospital deaths at days 33, 40, 45 and 50. A 65-year-old lady died on day 40 from sepsis caused by small bowel infarction. A 30-year-old man died on the 33rd postoperative day owing to liver failure from accelerated hepatic lymphoma spread. A 71-year-old diabetic lady died on the 45th postoperative day from sepsis caused by an untreated
subphrenic abscess
. A 65-year-old lady died on day 50 from systemic candidiasis after adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). Further reduction in operative mortality could be achieved by better patient selection. Liver resection still remains a major operation, but has become a safe surgical procedure.
...
PMID:Early mortality in 100 consecutive liver resections in 96 patients with benign and malignant liver tumours. 779
The diagnostic delay which accompanies the colon-rectum neoplastic desease makes that complications are often the first signal. This work means to prove, according to our experience, that the incidence of these complications is high and that only in a few patients undergoing emergency treatment is possible a one-stage procedure with radical purpose. In our survey, since Genuary 1975 to December 1993, 473 patients (255 males and 218 females) affected of colon-rectum cancer were treated: among these 54 (11.5%) underwent emergency surgery. The neoplasm was located: in the rectosigmoid junction in 25 cases (46.3%) in the caecum or in the right colon in 10 cases (18.6%), in the left colon and in the hepatic flexure in 6 cases (11.1%), in splenic flexure in 4 cases (7.4%), and in the trasversum colon in 3 cases (5.5%). According to Astler & Coller classification 22 patients (40.8%) were C2, 17 (31.5%) were D, 11 (20.4%) were B2, 3 (5.5%) were A, and only 1 patient (1.8%) was C1. 16 patients (29.7%) underwent a one-stage procedure, 8 (14.9%) had a first stage with a colostomy added together with resective procedure, and 3 (5.5%) patients had a Hartmann procedure. In 27 (50%) patients was possible only a palliative procedure. Finally, 10 patients (18.5%) had post-operative complications such as anastomotic fistula, wound's leakage or
subphrenic abscess
, and 11 patients (20.4%) died for
cardiac insufficiency
, ARDS, renal failure or cerebral stroke.
...
PMID:[Emergency surgical treatment in cancer of the colon]. 868 97