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Query: UMLS:C0021843 (bowel obstruction)
9,927 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Carcinoma of the cecum, the third most common location for malignancy of the large bowel, was examined with attention centered upon cecal cancers producing obstruction. Reviewing 136 patients revealed 11 obstructing lesions (8.1%) presenting as distal small bowel obstructions. The mean age of the patients was 74 years. All but one patient had resection for cure which consisted of a right hemicolectomy with ileotransverse colostomy. There was no operative mortality or significant morbidity. Bowel obstruction due to cecal carcinoma is an infrequent occurrence arising in elderly patients and carries a poor survival rate due to advanced disease at the time of diagnosis and treatment.
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PMID:Obstructing carcinoma of the cecum. 223 7

In order to find out the etiological patterns of intestinal obstruction, we reviewed 1205 cases diagnosed as intestinal obstruction at our hospital. The operative findings, locations of obstruction and pathological results were analyzed among 707 cases who were operated on. The most common cause of colon obstruction was tumor (78.7%). The etiologies of small intestinal obstruction were: adhesions, 47.4%; hernia, 22.1%; tumor, 11.8%; intussusception, 8.8%; foreign bodies, 3.7%; and miscellaneous causes, 6.2%. In the patients older than 40 years, the most common causes of intestinal obstruction were adhesion and malignancy, in contrast to hernia and intussusception that were commonly found in children. The mean age of the patients with colon obstruction was older than those with small bowel obstruction, 55.7 +/- 21. vs 39.4 +/- 17.3 (P less than 0.001). Of the patients with previous abdominal surgery, adhesions caused the obstruction in up to 60.5%. Among the 102 cases who had been operated for abdominal malignancy, the cause of intestinal obstruction was due to recurrent tumor in 78 patients (76.4%). Of patients without previous abdominal surgery, the etiologies of intestinal obstruction were: incarcerated hernia, 36.7%; tumor, 21.1%; intussusception, 15.6%; and adhesion, 13.8%. The incidence of strangulation obstruction was 25.7%, of which the major causes were adhesions, 51.7%; and hernia. 43.0%. We concluded that the most common cause of colon obstruction was tumor. The two most common causes of small intestinal obstruction were adhesions and hernia. Age and past history of abdominal surgery can much help for the differential diagnosis.
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PMID:[Etiology of intestinal obstruction--4 years' experience]. 225 97

A series of 185 patients, 133 males and 52 females, were treated by ileal conduit urinary diversion in the past 17 years. The patients ranged in age from 7 months to 81 years with an average of 59 years. Diversions were performed for malignant diseases in 174 patients, 85% of whom underwent a simultaneous radical surgery. The follow-up covered the postoperative period from 4 months to 16 years 8 months with an average of 4 years 8 months. Six patients (3%) died within 1 month of operation, and 43 of a total of 58 mortal cases died of cancer thereafter. The survival rates of 143 patients with bladder cancer were 84% for 1 year, 72% for 3 years, 67% for 5 years, 62% for 10 years and 54% for 15 years. Early complications were noticed in 38% of the patients. Delayed wound healing due to local infection (20%) and intestinal obstruction (10%) were the two major complications in this period. Late complications were encountered in 51% of the patients. Mild peristomal dermatitis (22%) and gradually developing renal complications (22%) are two major problems in the standard ileal conduit urinary diversion. The latter was significantly more frequent in patients who underwent the operation between 1973 and 1981 than in those who had the surgery between 1982 and 1989. Postoperative hydronephrosis was observed in 15 (13%) of 117 patients who showed normal urograms preoperatively. Ileoureteral reflux was observed in 50% of the cases with nonobstructing conduits, while it increased up to 70% along with obstruction of the conduit.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[A 17-year experience with ileal conduit urinary diversion--early and late complications]. 227 8

The incidence of chronic radiation enteritis appears to have risen in recent years due to the increasing utilization of radiotherapy for abdominal and pelvic malignancies. The etiology, pathogenesis, and management of radiation enteritis are discussed. Two case reports exemplify the progressive nature of the disease. Case 1 demonstrates the classical picture of multiple exacerbations and remissions of partial small bowel obstruction and the eventual need for surgical management ten years after radiation therapy. Case 2 presents the more severe sequelae of an acute perforation with a 14-yr latency period. Predisposing factors in the progression of radiation injury include excessive radiation, underlying cardiovascular disease, fixation of the bowel, and an asthenic habitus. In both cases, radiation injury was localized to a discrete segment of bowel; therefore, resection with a primary end-to-end anastomosis was performed. In addition, diseased bowel was eliminated and, therefore, would not cause further complications such as intractable bleeding or fistula formation. The review focuses on current knowledge which may be applied to the treatment and prevention of radiation enteritis.
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PMID:Radiation-induced enteropathy. 230 33

Sixteen patients with advanced epithelial ovarian cancer who were treated with cytoreductive surgery followed by multiagent chemotherapy were found to have residual tumor masses less than 2 cm in greatest diameter at reexploration and were treated with whole-abdominal radiation (19-31 Gy). Thirteen patients also received pelvic boosts to a total pelvic dose of 41-53.7 Gy. Radiotherapy was completed in all but 2 patients after treatment delays in 7 patients. Early treatment complications included myelosuppression in 11 patients, diarrhea in 3, and a self-limited small bowel obstruction in one. Delayed complications were severe and included 9 patients with radiation enterocolitis, 8 of whom required intestinal resection or diversion. One additional patient with radiation cystitis required instillation of formalin to control bleeding. Two patients are without evidence of disease 28 and 30 months following radiotherapy, while the remaining 14 patients have recurred after a median progression-free interval of 9 months (range 1-30 months). All patients who recurred failed within the treatment field and died of cancer after a median interval of 19 months following radiotherapy and 9 months after documentation of progression. These data suggest that few patients with persistent ovarian cancer following surgery and chemotherapy will be salvaged with radiotherapy.
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PMID:Whole-abdominal radiotherapy for patients with minimal residual epithelial ovarian cancer. 231 42

From August 1979 to May 1986, various brachytherapy techniques were applied at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center (MSKCC) in an adjuvant setting with/without surgery and external radiation therapy in the management of advanced malignant melanoma. Thirty-three patients underwent brachytherapy procedures. The patients' ages ranged from 35 to 82 years, with a median age of 56 years. Fourteen patients had disease localized to the implant site, whereas 19 patients also had disseminated disease elsewhere. The indications for implant were residual gross disease (21), microscopically positive margins (3), and histologically negative but clinically close margins of resection (9). Local control at the implant site was noted in 80% of patients at 6 months and 42% of patients at 1 year; two patients had reached 54 months and 72 months with no evidence of disease. Local control was 100% (9/9) in patients with histologically negative but clinically close margins of resection, and 48% (11/23) with microscopically positive margins and/or gross residual disease. Complications were seen as follows: delay in wound healing (1), wound infections (4), radiation enteritis (1), small bowel obstruction (1). The present study suggests that brachytherapy combined with surgery can achieve a good local control in patients with negative but clinically close margins of resection. In patients with gross residual disease who are at a high risk for local recurrence, approximately one-half can be locally controlled with this approach. These preliminary results should be tested in a prospective controlled study.
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PMID:Role of brachytherapy in malignant melanoma: a preliminary report. 232 20

The records of 51 patients diagnosed with enterovesical fistulas at Virginia Mason Medical Center from 1974 to 1988 were reviewed. Diverticulitis (41%), Crohn's disease (17%), and colorectal cancer (16%) were the major causes. In 50 of 51 patients, the diagnosis was made on the basis of the clinical history and the urine culture. Radiologic and endoscopic studies failed to identify the fistula in 20%, though all were confirmed at operation or autopsy. In four of eight patients with fistulas secondary to colorectal cancer, malignancy was not diagnosed preoperatively. Operation was performed in 84% of the patients. One-stage resection of the bowel was performed in 66% of patients with the intent of removing the fistula. The complication rate was 8% with no deaths. All multi-stage procedures were performed for fistulas complicated by abscess or bowel obstruction. There were two postoperative deaths in patients with metastatic cancer undergoing palliative diversion. All eight patients treated by diverting colostomy had persistent fistulas and urinary sepsis. All eight patients treated with antibiotics but without operation were free of complications of the fistula until death from other causes. Enterovesical fistula is a clinical diagnosis. Preoperative studies should be used to delineate the bowel disease and search for malignancy rather than to see the fistula, which is clinically apparent. One-stage resection of the involved bowel is the procedure of choice in the absence of abscess or bowel obstruction. When resection is not feasible, medical management with antibiotics is preferable to colostomy.
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PMID:Management of enterovesical fistulas. 233 17

Six patients underwent translumbar amputation (TLA), a life-saving procedure, after standard modalities of therapy failed to control the progression of the disease. The primary diagnoses were as follows: pelvic arterial-venous (A-V) malformation, 1; sacral chordoma, 3; giant cell tumor of the sacrum, 1; and paraplegia with squamous cell cancer arising in intractable decubitus, 1. There were no operative deaths. The following postoperative complications developed in five patients: urinary fistulae, 2; small bowel obstruction, 1; intraabdominal bleeding, 1; hypertension, 2; small bowel fistula, 1; and dehiscence of skin closure, 1. Two patients died with distant metastases (24 months) and distant metastases with local recurrence (6 months). The remaining four patients were alive and well 72, 56, 48, and 18 months after the surgical procedure. All of these patients have reached the rehabilitation goals.
Cancer 1990 Jun 15
PMID:Translumbar amputation. 234 Apr 66

Operations were carried out on 128 patients with cancer of the colon complicated by the intestinal obstruction. In right localization of the tumor, 25 patients were subjected to one-stage hemicolectomy, ileotransversoanastomosis was established in 6 patients. In left localization, the tumor was removed with the formation of colostomy in 54 patients, double-barrel colostomy or by-pass intestinal anastomosis were created in 36 patients. Among 63 patients with stage III carcinoma in whom obstruction was relieved and the tumor removed simultaneously, 6 died in the postoperative period. There were no fatal outcomes of two-stage radical operations conducted on 9 patients. A total of 33 (25.8%) patients died in the postoperative period. On the basis of the obtained results, the authors consider treatment of intestinal obstruction by removal of the tumor justified.
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PMID:[Surgical tactics in cancer of the colon complicated by intestinal obstruction]. 237 59

Retrospective analysis by chart review, personal interview, and physical examination identified 88 patients who received 96 jejunal free flaps over a 10 year period. Seventy-nine of these patients had cancer. There were 13 operative failures (13.5 percent) in 10 patients. Failures were attributed to arterial thrombosis in four instances, venous anastomotic problems in four instances, fistula and infection in the neck in one instance, carotid blowout in one instance, psychosis with avulsion in one instance, and an unknown cause in two instances. Seven second attempts at salvage of jejunal flaps were performed with five successes. There were five deaths in the perioperative period (6 percent). Of these, one was directly attributed to graft failure. The following eight abdominal complications required operation: wound dehiscence (four instances), small bowel obstruction (one instance), Mallory-Weiss tear (one instance), gastrostomy tube leak (one instance), and acute gastric dilatation (one instance). Complications in the neck included infection (six instances), infection requiring operation (three instances), hematoma (three instances), and suture line dehiscence (one instance). Fistulas developed in 28 patients (32 percent), 12 of whom required operative closure (43 percent). Significant stenosis developed in six patients, two of whom required operative revision. Of 79 patients treated for cancer, 34 died from progression of disease which recurred an average of 9.7 months postoperatively. Death ensued an average of 16.7 months postoperatively. Ten patients died with no evidence of disease. At last follow-up, 28 patients were alive without apparent disease. Twenty-six of these patients have good swallowing function. Significant palliation and a high rate of restoration of function are possible with the free jejunal autograft. Careful patient selection should markedly decrease operative morbidity and mortality.
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PMID:Ten years experience with the free jejunal autograft. 244 22


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