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Query: UMLS:C0021843 (
bowel obstruction
)
9,927
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Between 1971 and 1985, 598 patients with ovarian carcinoma were treated with abdomino-pelvic radiation therapy. Acute complications included nausea and vomiting in 364 patients (61%) which were severe in 36, and diarrhea in 407 patients (68%), severe in 35. Leukopenia (less than 2.0 x 10(9) cells/liter) and
thrombocytopenia
(less than 100 x 10(9) cells/liter) occurred in 64 patients (11%) each. Treatment interruptions occurred in 136 patients (23%), and 62 patients (10%) did not complete treatment. In both situations the most common cause was myelosuppression. Late complications included chronic diarrhea in 85 patients (14%), transient hepatic enzyme elevation in 224 (44%), and symptomatic basal pneumonitis in 23 (4%). Serious late bowel complications were infrequent: 25 patients (4.2%) developed
bowel obstruction
and 16 required operation. Multivariate analysis was unable to determine any significant prognostic factors for
bowel obstruction
; however, the moving-strip technique of radiation therapy was associated with a significantly greater risk of developing chronic diarrhea, pneumonitis, and hepatic enzyme elevation than was the open beam technique. We conclude that abdomino-pelvic radiation therapy as used in these patients is associated with modest acute complications and a low risk of serious late toxicity.
...
PMID:Analysis of complications in patients treated with abdomino-pelvic radiation therapy for ovarian carcinoma. 155 75
To assess the feasibility and effectiveness of combined therapy on locally advanced cervical cancer, we entered 38 patients into a study. The patients were treated with mitomycin-C (10 mg/m2) on Days 1 and 30 and 5-FU (1000 mg/m2) on Days 1 to 4 and Days 30 to 33. In 5 weeks 4500-5000 cGy was given concurrently, followed by radioactive implants. Twenty-six patients had an early-stage disease (IB-IIB) and twelve had a late-stage disease (IIIB-IVA). Eighty-seven percent (33/38) of the patients had a tumor measuring 5 cm or more. The other 5 patients with a tumor size under 5 cm had biopsy-proven positive pelvic nodes; 2 of these 5 patients had a pretherapy hysterectomy. Tumor response, complete (CR) vs partial (PR), was assessed in 36 patients 3 months after completion of therapy. A CR was noted in 80% (29/36) of the patients. The PR status conferred a detrimental effect on the pelvic disease control (PDC), disease-free survival (DFS), and survival (S) while late stage correlated with the development of distant metastases (DM) and a poor DFS. PDC was obtained in 93% (27/29) of the patients who had a CR, as compared to only 43% (3/7) of those with a PR (P = 0.0228). The DFS and S rates were 59 and 77% for patients with a CR and 21 and 19% for those with a PR; respective P values were 0.0340 and 0.0002. Eleven percent (3/26) of the patients with an early stage developed DM, as compared to 50% (6/12) of those with late stage, (P = 0.0016). The DFS rates were 80 and 37% for patients with an early and late stage, respectively (P = 0.0141). Four patients developed transient neutropenia and one had transient
thrombocytopenia
. The second dose of mitomycin-C was omitted in 4 patients due to persistent neutropenia in 3 and to transfusion-related hepatitis in 1. Two percent (5/21) of the patients who had a staging laparotomy developed wound dehiscence. Three patients developed non-cancer-related small
bowel obstruction
requiring surgery. We concluded that this combined regimen was well tolerated. Although it was effective in controlling the cancer in the pelvis, this regimen failed to control DM in late-stage patients.
...
PMID:Mitomycin-C/5-FU and radiation therapy for locally advanced uterine cervical cancer. 175 91
Retroperitoneal soft-tissue tumors are rare in infancy. In this report, we describe a distinctive hemangioendothelioma occurring in the retroperitoneum of a 10-month-old baby girl. This lesion was complicated by obstructive jaundice,
intestinal obstruction
, and
thrombocytopenia
(Kasabach-Merritt syndrome) leading to intracranial hemorrhage. The microscopic features of this tumor, characterized by infiltrative lobules of spindle cells and capillaries, are distinct from those of other well-recognized vasoformative tumors. In some areas, the tumor shows a striking resemblance to Kaposi's sarcoma; criss-crossing fascicles of spindle cells are interspersed with narrow vascular spaces, but PAS-positive hyaline globules are absent. The tumor can also be distinguished from the cellular hemangioma of childhood by its well-formed spindle cell fascicles. Several histologically similar cases have been reported. All of them occurred in the retroperitoneum of infants and were frequently complicated by Kasabach-Merritt syndrome. We therefore propose the designation "Kaposi-like infantile hemangioendothelioma" for this unusual neoplasm.
...
PMID:Kaposi-like infantile hemangioendothelioma. A distinctive vascular neoplasm of the retroperitoneum. 843 12
Fifty-eight patients with ovarian malignancies have been treated using a delayed split whole abdominal irradiation technique (DSA) allowing the entire tumor volume to be irradiated with tumoricidal fractional doses without undue toxicity. The lower hemiabdomen was irradiated with 2 Gy per fraction to a total dose of 40 Gy. A 2-6 hour delay was used between the irradiation of each half of the abdomen to avoid excessive acute gastrointestinal toxicity. The upper hemiabdomen was irradiated with 1.5 Gy per fraction to a total dose of 30 Gy. The acute toxicity was acceptable, with 53 of 58 patients able to complete the prescribed course of treatment. Three patients (5%) experienced grade 3 or greater acute gastrointestinal toxicity. Fourteen of 60 patients (24%) required treatment breaks because of
thrombocytopenia
. Nadir platelet counts were lower in patients who had received previous chemotherapy than in previously untreated patients (80,000 vs 118,000; p = .02). However, only 4 out of 60 patients were unable to complete DSA because of prolonged
thrombocytopenia
. In addition to DSA, patients were also treated with intraperitoneal 32P (52 patients), intraperitoneal human ovarian antitumor serum (14 patients), and prior (14 patients) or subsequent (32 patients) chemotherapy. Granulocytopenia was more severe among patients who had received prior chemotherapy (mean nadir 900 vs 2200). Seven patients (11.5%) developed delayed
bowel obstruction
in the absence of recurrence. There was one death caused by hepatitis, presumably related to colloidal 32P and DSA. Twenty-five percent of Stage III optimally cytoreduced patients were disease-free at 5 years; these patients had a median survival of 45 months. DSA irradiation is an acceptable technique for delivering a high fractional dose of radiation to the entire peritoneal cavity. Shielding of the iliac crests spares bone marrow allowing DSA irradiation to be integrated into an aggressive combined modality treatment plan.
...
PMID:Delayed split whole abdominal irradiation in the combined modality treatment of ovarian cancer. 200 41
We have reviewed 40 patients with immune
thrombocytopenia
purpura (ITP) to assess current methods of preparation for surgery and to evaluate perioperative complications and response to splenectomy. Twenty-one patients had chronic ITP (greater than 1 year duration) and 19 patients had severe acute
thrombocytopenia
(platelet counts less than 10,000). A progression of methods of pretreatment was seen in the 10-year period reviewed. Seventeen patients received no treatment before admission for surgery, and 10 of these received platelet transfusions. Seventeen patients received steroids immediately preceding surgery; 16 of these responded and 1 received a platelet transfusion. Recently, 5 patients received intravenous gamma globulin (IgG) preceding surgery with all patients responding and none receiving platelet transfusions. One patient received a combination of steroids and IgG with good response and did not require platelet transfusion. No major postoperative complications occurred (ie, pancreatitis, small
bowel obstruction
, or sepsis) except for one patient requiring a secondary exploration for an accessory spleen and recurrent
thrombocytopenia
. Eight patients (20%), 6 with severe ITP and 2 with chronic ITP (5 males and 3 females) developed recurrence of
thrombocytopenia
following surgery up to 1 1/2 years after splenectomy. These patients all required further medical therapy. Three additional patients (2 chronic and 1 severe) developed
thrombocytopenia
following viral illnesses, but required no further therapy. Of the 8 surgical failures, 4 failed to respond to prior treatment with steroids, 1 to IgG, and 2 failed to respond to combination therapy, while one surgical failure responded to both steroid and combination therapy. Of the responders to splenectomy (32 patients), only 3 failed to respond to prior treatment with steroids.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Immune thrombocytopenia: surgical therapy and predictors of response. 205
Thirty-six major abdominal operations were performed on 35 Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS) patients (33 men, two women). Twenty-two elective operations were indicated for diagnosis of abdominal or retroperitoneal mass (6), incomplete
bowel obstruction
(5), intra-abdominal infection (4), biliary symptoms (3),
thrombocytopenia
(3), and toxic megacolon (1). Fourteen emergency operations were for perforated viscus or peritonitis (11), massive gastrointestinal bleeding (2), and cecal volvulus (1). In 5 of 22 (23%) elective operations AIDS was unknown to the treating physicians until diagnosed by the surgical pathology; in contrast, all 14 emergency operations were in patients who had a known diagnosis of AIDS. The operative findings were related to AIDS in 34 of 36 (94%) operations. Cytomegalovirus was the most common pathogen, isolated or identified microscopically in 11 patients (eight emergency and three elective operations). Mycobacterial infections presented as retroperitoneal adenopathy or splenic abscess in six patients. Non-Hodgkins lymphoma was the most common malignancy found, presenting as an abdominal mass (4),
bowel obstruction
(3), or with gastrointestinal bleeding (2). Kaposi's sarcoma was diagnosed at laparotomy in four patients. The 1-month operative mortality rate for elective operation was 9% (2 of 22) and 46% (6 of 13) in emergencies. Postoperative complications included 1 reoperation for sepsis caused by inadequately resected CMV colitis; 1 pancreatic fistula; 1 wound dehiscence, and 2 minor wound infections.
...
PMID:Acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS). Indications for abdominal surgery, pathology, and outcome. 255 44
Twenty-four patients with locally advanced (19 patients) or metastatic (5 patients) tumors were treated in a Phase I study combining constant intravenous infusions of iododeoxyuridine (IUdR) and hyperfractionated radiation therapy. IUdR was given as a constant infusion for 12 hours/day for two separate 14-day infusion periods in most patients. The dose of IUdR was escalated from 250 to 1200 mg/m2/12-hour infusion in this study. The initial tumor volume was treated to 45 Gy/1.5 Gy BID/3 weeks followed by a cone-down boost to 20-25 Gy/1.25 Gy BID/2 weeks after a planned 2-week break. THe IUdR infusion preceded the initial and cone-down irradiation by 1 week. Local acute toxicity (within the radiation volume) was uncommon and few patients required an alteration of the planned treatment schedule. Two patients developed late local toxicity with one patient showing clinical signs of radiation hepatitis and another patient developing a large
bowel obstruction
that required surgical bypass. Dose-limiting systemic toxicity was confined to the bone marrow with moderate to severe
thrombocytopenia
developing on Day 10-14 of infusions at 1200 mg/m2/12 hours. Mild stomatitis and partial alopecia occurred in some patients at this dose level. No systemic skin toxicity was seen. Pharmacology studies revealed steady-state arterial plasma levels of IUdR of 1 to 8 X 10(-6) M over the dose range used. In vivo IUdR incorporation into tumors was studied in three patients with high-grade sarcomas using an anti-IUdR monoclonal antibody and immunohistochemistry and demonstrated incorporation in up to 50-70% of tumor cells. The preliminary treatment results, particularly in patients with unresectable sarcomas, are encouraging. In comparison to our previous experience with intravenous bromodeoxyuridine, this Phase I study of IUdR shows less systemic toxicity (especially to skin), higher (2-3X) steady-state arterial levels, and comparable in vivo tumor cell incorporation.
...
PMID:A phase I study of intravenous iododeoxyuridine as a clinical radiosensitizer. 299 90
Prompted by the case history of a 17 year old girl with anaemia, mononucleosis infectiosa and abdominal pain, paroxysmal nocturnal haemoglobinuria (PNH) is described. After a mononucleosis infectiosa infection she developed many complications of which the most prominent were hemolysis and thrombosis. Severe abdominal pain and episodic
bowel obstruction
occurred as a result of micro-infarction of the mesentery; bone marrow aplasia and lysis of platelets resulted in progressive
thrombopenia
. Pathogenesis and therapeutical possibilities are discussed. Coexistence of a necrotising enterocolitis with rectovaginal fistula, a heart infarction and the striking weight loss and hyponatremia during exacerbations, as seen in our patient, have not previously been described in PNH.
...
PMID:[An adolescent with paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria]. 317 15
To assess the role of the general surgeon in the care of patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) and AIDS-related complex (ARC) the hospital records of all patients with AIDS or ARC who underwent a major operation at the General Surgical Service of Crawford W. Long Memorial Hospital were reviewed. Of 79 patients with AIDS or ARC diagnosed since 1982, 14 required major abdominal surgery. Operations performed were for gastrointestinal (GI) complications of opportunistic infections and neoplasms (four), diagnosis of major retroperitoneal lymphadenopathy (four), and treatment of AIDS-related immune
thrombocytopenia
(six). GI complications consisted of two cases of cytomegalovirus perforation of ileum and colon, one case of bleeding ileocolonic lymphoma, and one case of cryptosporidium cholecystitis. Laparotomy for diagnosis of retroperitoneal lymphadenopathy was performed in four patients and provided diagnostic material in three of them. Six patients underwent splenectomy for AIDS-related immune
thrombocytopenia
. Four of these patients had previously been treated with prednisone without impressive results. All patients had marked improvement of their platelet counts and clinical bleeding after splenectomy. Postoperative complications were common and consisted of wound infection, disseminated intravascular coagulation, GI bleeding, pneumocystis pneumonia, small-
bowel obstruction
, and cytomegalovirus pneumonia. One patient died after laparotomy for perforated ulcers of the ileum and colon.
...
PMID:Surgical complications of human immunodeficiency virus infection. 333 82
Following single-agent or combination chemotherapy, 9 patients with epithelial carcinoma of the ovary had elective second-look laparotomy. Macroscopic intraperitoneal disease was resected in 4 patients. Therefore, after the laparotomy, all 9 patients had only biopsy-proven, microscopic residual disease, and they received whole abdominopelvic irradiation. Hematological tolerance was satisfactory, with only 2 patients developing asymptomatic
thrombocytopenia
. Mild gastrointestinal reactions, while frequent during radiotherapy, did not interrupt treatment in any patient. After follow-up from 12 to 34 months (median 16 months) [corrected], 2 patients died of cancer, 2 were alive with cancer, 3 were alive without clinical recurrence, and 2 were alive without biopsy-proven recurrence. Bowel complication occurred in 4 patients: 2 developed
intestinal obstruction
due to recurrent tumor, 1 developed subacute
bowel obstruction
which spontaneously resolved, and 1 patient required bowel resection because of a radiation complication. This study indicated that after single- or multiple-drug chemotherapy, most patients could complete the course of whole abdominopelvic irradiation. Gastrointestinal complications could be secondary to radiation damage or to recurrent tumor. While whole abdominopelvic irradiation was not an effective second-line treatment, some long-term survivors could still be expected.
...
PMID:Salvage radiotherapy for carcinoma of the ovary following chemotherapy. 336 92
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