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Pivot Concepts:
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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0034065 (
pulmonary embolism
)
14,979
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Fifty-six operations for intestinal complications of radiation therapy were performed in 48 patients at the Second Surgical Clinic, University of Vienna between 1971 and 1985. The lesions were located in the small bowel (n = 32), the colon and rectum (n = 27) and the duodenum (n = 2). The incidence of the operations increased during the fifteen-years-period, 48.2% being performed in the last five years. 96% of the patients were females, the most frequent cause for irradiation was ovarian cancer (39.6%), followed by cervical (27%) and endometrial cancer (16.7%). 20 Patients (39.6%) had also been treated by chemotherapy. Ovarian cancer as underlying disease (56%) and chemotherapy (56%) were more frequent in small bowel lesions, than in other locations. The radiation damage presented as stenoses (n = 38), fistulas (n = 13), perforations (n = 3), one rectal ulcer and one hemorrhagic
proctitis
. Resection with end-to-end-anastomosis (n = 15) and bypass (n = 14) were the operations most frequently performed on the small bowel, whereas most colonic and rectal lesions were treated by colostomy alone (n = 14). The postoperative course was complicated by fistulas in 7 patients, by peritonitis in 5, by
pulmonary embolism
in one and duodenal ulcer perforation in another case. Six patients died postoperatively (10.7%), 5 because of peritonitis. After small bowel resection complications occurred in 4 cases, and two (13%) of the patients died. Bypass in small bowel lesions performed as well as resection: 5 complications and one death (7%) occurred. Single layer suture technique performed better than two layer anastomoses. Eighteen operations with single layer anastomoses resulted in 16.7% complications and no death.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Surgical therapy of late radiation sequelae of the gastrointestinal tract]. 351 20
Staging pelvic lymphadenectomy (PLND) was performed in 210 prostatic cancer patients (mean age 67 years, clinical stage T0-T3 M0). A radical retropubic prostatectomy was subsequently performed in 54 men, ten of whom also received postoperative radiotherapy due to positive surgical margins. Ninety-eight patients were treated with external beam radiation alone (70 Gy in 35 fractions) and the remaining 58 received endocrine therapy. The complications of PLND alone (156 patients), consisted of wound infection in eight patients, hematoma or lymphocele in seven, venous thrombosis in three, and cardiac infarction in one patient. Early side-effects of radiotherapy included mild to moderate
proctitis
and/or cystitis in 57 patients. One year after completion of therapy, 48 of the irradiated men had
proctitis
, but only six had severe symptoms. Four patients developed radiation cystitis and two urethral stricture. Following prostatectomy (54 patients), two patients died in
pulmonary embolism
and another one developed a deep venous thrombosis. Hematoma occurred in five patients. Of the 42 surviving patients who did not receive postoperative radiotherapy, eight developed anastomotic strictures and four had severe stress incontinence. Only five were fully potent one year after surgery. Eight of the ten patients receiving radiotherapy after prostatectomy developed side-effects from the intestine and/or the urinary bladder. Two of them became totally incontinent. One developed a severe hemorrhagic cystitis necessitating urinary diversion. All ten were impotent after treatment.
...
PMID:Morbidity of pelvic lymphadenectomy, radical retropubic prostatectomy and external radiotherapy in patients with localised prostatic cancer. 781 68