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Query: UMLS:C0027627 (
metastases
)
103,950
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A total of 25 patients at least 75 years old underwent continent urinary diversion via a modified Indiana Pouch during a 68-month period, 21 of these with simultaneous radical cystectomy or anterior exenteration. The preoperative medical conditions as well as the early and late operative morbidity and mortality are reviewed with a mean follow up of 27 months. Average age of patients was 78.5 years, and the mean age of survivors is 81 years. There were two early mortalities attributed to ileal gangrene with secondary
sepsis
and aspiration pneumonia. Postoperative complications (superficial wound infection, middle colic vein bleed, right ureteral leak, ileus) occurred in five patients, two of whom required re-operation. Mean hospital stay was 12.4 days and ranged from 9-20. There were only six late complications [ureteral stricture (3), small bowel obstruction (1), incontinence (1)] necessitating re-hospitalization and surgical intervention. Late infectious complications included recurrent urinary tract infections (3), pyelonephritis (2), and C. Difficile enterocolitis (2) all managed medically. In addition, 10 other patients have died, 9 from
metastatic disease
and 1 from intercurrent medical problems. Of the 13 remaining patients, 11 are disease free and all are continent with a mean follow-up time of 33 months. We conclude that continent urinary diversion via a modified Indiana pouch with radical cystectomy or anterior exenteration can be performed with minimal morbidity or mortality, even in an elderly population.
...
PMID:Continent urinary diversion using a Modified Indiana Pouch in elderly patients. 794 43
Alternating chemoradiotherapy has recently been reported to produce encouraging results in patients with advanced head and neck cancer. We have treated 17 patients with squamous cell carcinoma of the upper esophagus by alternating chemoradiotherapy and by following the patients for 2 to 5 years, or until their death. Chemotherapy (cisplatin and 5-fluorouracil) was delivered during weeks 1, 4, and 7, and radiotherapy (180 to 200 cGy twice each day to 2,000 cGy) during weeks 2, 5, and 8 (total 6,000 cGy). Three patients (18%) died of toxicity (nadir
sepsis
). All 14 patients who survived the treatment achieved a complete response as shown by endoscopy and biopsy specimens, with restoration of swallowing, and none experienced a local relapse. Three patients died of distant
metastases
(actuarial incidence 32% at 3 years). The 5-year survival rate was only 16%, however, because 8 other patients with no evidence of the cancer died of a variety of other causes: radiation pneumonitis (1), chronic neutropenia (1), esophageal actinomycosis (1), pneumonia (2), stroke (1), myocardial infarction (1), and small-cell lung cancer (1). Conceivably, some further improvement in the results might occur from cytokines, stem cells, and brachytherapy (by decreasing deaths due to toxicity), but with so many causes of comorbidity it seems unlikely, for the foreseeable future, that the 5-year survival rate could be much improved by better treatment of esophageal cancer.
...
PMID:Patterns of failure in carcinoma of the upper esophagus after alternating chemoradiotherapy. 797 65
Hepatectomy has long been a formidable surgical procedure because the risk of hemorrhage it can involve. With a better understanding of hepatic anatomy, left hepatectomy, right hepatectomy and segmental hepatic resections have been standardized. Between January 1989 and December 1992, 18 hepatectomies were performed on 16 patients in the Department of Surgery, General Hospital, La Chaux-de-Fonds, Switzerland. The mean age of the patients was 65. The surgical indications were: hepatic
metastases
11 (61%); gallbladder or biliary duct neoplasm 4 (22%); hydatic cyst 3 (17%). 11 segmental resection, 3 left hepatectomies, 2 right hepatectomies, 2 pericystectomies were performed. Blood loss during these operations averaged 2800 ml. Surgical complications appeared in 6 cases (hemorrhage 1, postoperative effusion 4,
sepsis
1). One patient died within 30 days (mortality 5%). Hepatectomy is nowadays a safe procedure. It can be performed in a general hospital with a trained surgical team and an efficient intensive care unit.
...
PMID:[Standardized hepatectomy. 18 cases operated in a peripheral hospital]. 803 39
The results of 37 consecutive cases of Hartmann's procedure over a 5-year period (1985-1990) were reviewed. The series consisted of 27 emergency procedures (11 diverticular disease, 13 carcinoma, two trauma and one sigmoid volvulus) and ten elective procedures (nine carcinoma and one peridiverticular abscess). The indications for emergency procedures were obstruction and perforation. All patients presented with faecal peritonitis owing to colonic perforation. The mean (range) age was 79.4 (34-90) years. The postoperative mortality rate was 30 per cent overall (11 of 37), 33 per cent (four of 12) in the diverticulitis group, 23 per cent (five of 22) in the carcinoma group, and 100 per cent in the iatrogenic trauma group. Death was mainly due to
sepsis
(82 per cent). Postoperative complications were mainly wound infections, which occurred in 43 per cent (16 of 37) cases. In 25 per cent of the surviving patients, re-establishment of continuity was performed in three of 17 (18 per cent) of the carcinoma group and three of seven (43 per cent) of the diverticulitis group. No attempt at restoration of intestinal continuity was made in six cases due to medical risk in two, extensive carcinoma in two and local recurrence with
metastatic disease
in two. Three patients refused all further intervention. There were no postoperative deaths after the restoration of continuity. This series reflects the severity of the pathology in this high risk group of patients. However, the operation can be life-saving for a selected group of patients and offers good palliation for advanced colorectal tumours.
...
PMID:The Hartmann procedure revisited. 823 29
721 patients with liver cirrhosis were regularly screened by sonography and determination of alpha fetoprotein during a period of eleven years (1.1.1982-1.1.1993). In 137 of them hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) was diagnosed; 28 (20.4%) had a unilocular HCC with a diameter up to 5 cm. Diagnosis was regularly verified by sonographic guided puncture, in rare cases by laparoscopy and biopsy. Beside a diameter of 5 cm the tumor should be localized at least 5 mm from the main structures in the hilus, and not in the centre of the liver; furthermore multilocular hepatocellular carcinomas and intra- and extrahepatic
metastases
were contraindications. Child-Pugh-classification should be A+B and urea synthesis rate at least 6 g per day. In 21 patients (75%) a portal hypertension was diagnosed; 19 (68%) had bled from esophageal varices; in case of one bleeding a therapeutic sclerotherapy and in case of recurrent variceal hemorrhage an elective shunt operation were performed. Surgical resection was carried out with controlled hypotension and temporary occlusion of the hepatoduodenal ligament. Tumor was removed by segmentectomy or bisegmentectomy and in rare cases by enucleation. There were 3 clinical deaths (10.7%); causes of death were liver failure and (2)
sepsis
(1). All patients could be followed up to January 1, 1993; there were 12 further deaths of liver failure, tumor recurrence or second tumor. 13 patients are still living. Thus the live expectancy for one year was 80, for 5 years 50 and for 10 years 30%. There is no doubt, that it is possible to detect hepatocellular carcinoma in patients with liver cirrhosis early by regular sonography and determination of alpha-fetoprotein.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Single hepatocellular carcinoma (phi < or = 5 cm) in liver cirrhosis. Early diagnosis and surgical removal]. 826 41
The outcome of treatment in 40 black patients (27 women, 13 men; mean age 62.9 years) with plantar melanoma over a 13-year period was analysed to evaluate the efficacy of wide local excision with split skin grafting. Substantial delay in seeking medical attention occurred in 35 patients. At presentation, 20 patients had stage I disease, one stage II, 15 stage III and four stage IV. Acral lentiginous melanoma (27 patients) was the most common histological type. The mean Breslow depth was 6.9 mm and 35 patients had lesions of Clark level IV or V. The mean surface area or plantar lesions was 13.3 cm2. Wide local excision with split skin grafting was used in 29 patients; four patients with neglected advanced plantar lesions had below-knee amputation and seven with
metastatic disease
did not undergo surgery. Graft
sepsis
occurred in six patients and local recurrence in two. Nine patients were alive at follow-up; the 5-year survival rate was 25 per cent. Delay in presentation and locally advanced disease may explain the poor prognosis of plantar melanoma in black South Africans.
...
PMID:Plantar melanoma in black South Africans. 840 99
A total of 46 consecutive patients were entered into this study to assess the efficacy and toxicity of an epirubicin/ifosfamide combination in treating locally advanced and/or metastatic adult sarcomas (38 soft-tissue sarcomas and 7 bone sarcomas in 45 evaluable patients). Epirubicin was given at escalating doses (from 50 to 100 mg/m2) as an intravenous (i.v.) bolus on day 1, and ifosfamide was given i.v. at 1.2 g/m2 daily on days 1-5. Cycles were repeated every 4 weeks. The overall response rate was 38% (17 of 45 patients), reaching 42% (16 of 38) in the soft-tissue sarcoma group and 44% (17 of 39) in patients who had not been treated previously. In all, 4 complete responses (CRs, 9%) and 13 partial responses (PRs, 29%) were obtained. Most responses (about 68%) were reached within the first 2 cycles. The high-dose intensity of epirubicin (P < 0.04), the histologic type (P < 0.03), the presence of metastatic lesions only (P < 0.01), and the lack of previous treatment (P < 0.04) were found to be positively correlated with the probability of response. The median duration of response was 8 months. The median survival period was 10 months for all evaluable patients and 21 months for those achieving CRs and PRs (P < 0.01). The tumor grade, performance status, and extent of disease at entry into the study correlated with survival. The treatment was well tolerated; no case of
sepsis
occurred, and neither acute nor cumulative cardiotoxicity was observed. Epirubicin in combination with ifosfamide is therefore effective in advanced and/or
metastatic disease
with acceptable toxicity. The activity of this combination as compared with that of either of the two drugs given alone at optimal doses needs to be evaluated in prospective randomized trials.
...
PMID:Ifosfamide plus epirubicin at escalating doses in the treatment of locally advanced and/or metastatic sarcomas. 845 3
The postoperative course of 159 patients with early gastric cancer operated on between 1974 and 1987 was followed for a median of 7.3 years. The cumulative 10-year survival rate(s.e.) calculated using follow-up data to the end of 1989 was 90.6(2.7) per cent excluding operative death and that from causes other than gastric cancer, or 86.3(3.0) per cent when operative mortality was included. The overall 10-year survival rate(s.e.) was 77.3(3.7) per cent. Univariate analysis showed a significant difference in survival rates between cancers confined to the mucosa and those with submucosal invasion (P = 0.02), between patients with and without lymph node
metastases
(P = 0.05) and between those < or = 50 and > 50 years of age (P = 0.02). Using Cox multivariate analysis and a stepwise procedure for eight variables (sex, age, depth of invasion, lymph node
metastases
, presence of ulceration, location, histological type, type of surgery), age and histological type had the most significant effect on survival. Seven operative deaths were recorded. Eleven patients died from recurrent cancer and one is still alive with a gastric remnant recurrence. Other causes of death were metachronous primary cancer (six patients), cardiovascular disease (two), pneumonia (three),
sepsis
(one) and car accident (one). Although the prognosis of early gastric cancer is relatively good in western countries, patients should be carefully followed over a long period for late recurrence and for metachronous cancer, which has a high incidence.
...
PMID:Early gastric cancer: follow-up after gastrectomy in 159 patients. 847 41
Having previously described some of the attitudes of health care providers toward resuscitation for themselves, based on an individual's beliefs about the likelihood of success of cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR), the differences among attitudes of physicians at different levels of training have now been assessed. A multi-question survey was sent to medical students, house officers, and attending physicians at two university medical centers. Sociodemographic information, questions regarding beliefs about outcome after CPR, and personal desires were included. Respondents were asked to identify the clinical condition carrying the worst prognosis during cardiac arrest from among:
metastatic cancer
(MC), end-stage renal disease (ESRD), acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS),
sepsis
, and myocardial infarction (MI), and to specify their resuscitation desires should they be affected by these conditions. The preferences of each group regarding resuscitation given their least favored diagnosis were assessed using chi 2 analysis of trends for binomial proportions. Approximately 186 questionnaires were evaluated and consisted of 90 by medical students (MS), 67 by house officers (HOs), and 29 by attending physicians (APs). Resuscitation desires for each diagnosis were MC, 7 of 40; ESRD, 8 of 34; AIDS, 10 of 74;
sepsis
, 10 of 15; and MI, 20 of 23. chi 2 test for trend of desire to be resuscitated from the self-selected worst prognostic category by level of training demonstrated no significant decrease in desire to be resuscitated with increasing level of training. Physician's beliefs about CPR may be influenced by their experiences with particular patients and events.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Discrepancy in resuscitation beliefs among physicians at various levels of training. 848 77
During the early 1980s liver transplantation (LTx) was expected to be a promising therapeutic option for patients with primary or secondary tumors confined to the liver. Because of disappointing results owing to death from early recurrence, LTx is currently restricted to well selected patients with small primary tumors and, in the case of liver metastases, to those with
metastases
of gastroenteropancreatic (GEP) tumor origin only. In our series of 300 liver transplantations four patients with GEP tumor
metastases
underwent LTx. The primary tumors were one neuroendocrine kidney tumor, one glucagonoma of the pancreas, and two cases of carcinoids of the pancreas. Because of local metastatic lymph node involvement upper gastrointestinal exenteration followed by LTx was performed in two patients. No patient survived beyond 33 months after LTx. Three patients died from tumor recurrence. In one patient who died from fungal
sepsis
autopsy revealed spine
metastases
that had been missed before LTx. Our dismal results do not compare well with promising data published previously by others for this particular patient group. Under the pressure of an increasing donor organ shortage, patients with GEP tumor
metastases
should be selected carefully for LTx.
...
PMID:Results of liver transplantation for gastroenteropancreatic tumor metastases. 858 17
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