Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0019079 (hemoptysis)
6,129 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We experienced a case of tracheoesophageal fistula successfully cured by surgical therapy after blunt trauma received 38 years ago. A 71-year-old man was injured blunt trauma at right chest by traffic accident in 1960, and was treated for pneumothorax and ribs fracture. In April, 1998, the patient came to the hospital for hemoptysis. Tracheoesophageal fistula at membranous wall 3 cm upper from the carina was diagnosed and operation was performed. Severe adhesion at 3 cm upper from carina was thought to be fistula. Incision was made at lateral esophageal wall and the fistula was confirmed at the esophageal anterior wall and the esophagus was cut in a circle around the fistula. Trachea was closed 1 layer sutures using esophageal all layers and esophagus was closed with 2 layer sutures. A pedicled 4th intercostal muscle was interposed between the tracheal and esophageal suture lines. Prevention of tracheal stenosis was possible without resection of fistula and closure of trachea using esophageal all layers. This operation was seemed to be effective. This case is supposed to be the longest delay between time of injury and its repair in the world.
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PMID:[A case of tracheoesophageal fistula cured by surgical therapy after blunt trauma received 38 years ago]. 1055 97

Tracheal squamous cell carcinoma is the most common pathology in smokers while ACC is more prevalent among non-smokers. These tumors tend also to be diagnosed late on account of delayed specific symptoms as hemoptysis, dyspnea, cough, hoarseness, and stridor being the most common. Management of tracheal tumors is essentially multidisciplinary. It includes interventional endoscopy, surgery, radiotherapy, and/or end luminal brachytherapy. Extensive segmental resection of the trachea is the potentially curative treatment of choice for primary lesion. The sleeve trachea resection is one of the optimal surgical modalities. The other options are: partial tracheal wall resection and immediate tracheal reconstruction, total laryngectomy plus partial resection of trachea and primary reconstruction, laryngeo-tracheal resection, cervico-mediastinal exenteration, or carinal resection and reconstruction. Trachea anastomosis is suitable for small defects. The platysma myocutaneous flap combined with the facial flap of the sternohyoid muscle, sternocleidomastoid myoperiosteal flap and the pectoralis major musculocutaneous flap are applied to reconstruct the defects of cervical trachea. Post-operative radiation therapy, in many cases, is considered a fundamental part of treatment. Contraindications to surgery include: metastatic disease, invasion of adjacent organs, involvement of airway greater than could be safely resected (i.e. >50% of trachea), involvement of airway that would leave grossly positive margins after resection, spinal kyphosis, or poor medical condition of the patient. Patients in the current report tolerated therapy well with the use of modern RT techniques and dose delivery to 60 to 64 Gy to a large extent of the central airway. Additional data and meta-analysis are required to validate the efficacy of chemoradiation in comparison to primary RT alone for unresectable cases and subsequently identify improved systemic therapies. Further investigation into the potential role of additional therapies, such as adjuvant chemotherapy or immunotherapy, may be worth exploring. Our initial findings suggest the use of concurrent chemotherapy in addition to RT in patients with locally advanced tracheal SCC.
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PMID:Primary Squamous Cell Carcinoma of the Trachea: Two Cases Report. 3247 54