Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0030552 (paresis)
5,831 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Techniques are available for carinal resection and reconstruction for bronchogenic carcinoma involving the carina. Successful outcome depends on careful patient selection, thorough preoperative evaluation, careful anesthetic management, strict attention to surgical technique, and compulsive postoperative care. Since 1973 we have performed 37 carinal resections for bronchogenic carcinoma: 21 right carinal pneumonectomies, 7 carinal resections, 7 carina plus lobe resections, and 2 carina plus pneumonectomy stump resections. Five patients had diseased N2 nodes and 13 patients had diseased N1 nodes. Complications included pulmonary (8), vocal cord paresis (3), atrial fibrillation (9), anastomotic stenosis (4), and anastomotic separation (3). There were 3 early postoperative deaths (8%). All were related to adult respiratory distress syndrome and were unresponsive to aggressive treatment. There were 4 late postoperative deaths between 2 and 4 months (10.9%). All late postoperative deaths were related to anastomotic complications (stenosis [1] and separation [3]). There are 5 absolute 5-year survivors and an actuarial 5-year survival rate of 19%.
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PMID:Carinal resection for bronchogenic carcinoma. 207 21

The paper presents the experience gained in performing 100 operations associated with removal of intravascular malignant tumors [tumorous thrombi (TT)] from the inferior cava vein (ICV), which were made without using artificial and assisted circulation. This approach is substantiated. The variants of TT extent and its associated surgical technical features are shown. The procedure developed by the authors for anesthesia and infusion therapy in performing these highly specific interventions is described. The postoperative period ran with complications in 27 patients: pulmonary thromboembolism (PTE) (n=6); pneumonia (n=5); acute renal failure (n=4); encephalopathy (4); acute pancreatitis (n=4); cardiac arrhythmia (n=4); hepatic failure (n=2); adult respiratory distress syndrome (n=2); sepsis with evolving multiple organ deficiency (n=1), gastrointestinal hemorrhage (n=2); intestinal paresis (n=1); ICV thrombosis (n=1); recurrent myocardial infarction (n=1). Intraoperatively, 3 patients died from massive PTE (n=1) and hemorrhage (n=2). In the early postoperative period, 2 patients died from hemorrhage and hypovolemic shock (n=1) and recurrent myocardial infarction (n=1). Two patients died from pyoseptic complications on days 11 and 35. Thus, the vast majority of patients successfully tolerate a surgical intervention when certain conditions (the stepwise design of an anesthesia scheme keeping in mind the specific features of the course of an operation, hemodynamic and laboratory monitoring, adequate venous access, efficient infusion-transfusion therapy, timely use of cardiovascular stimulants, use of intraoperative hardware reinfusion of autoerythrocytes) are met.
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PMID:[The specific features of anesthesiological provision of operations removing malignant neoplasms with a tumorous thrombus in the inferior cava vein]. 1631 42