Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0038358 (gastric ulcer)
5,179 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A case of hepatoma with cirrhosis for whom hepatectomy was impossible because of a severe complication is reported. The case has been treated with various treatments, so long survival has been obtained. The patient is a 56-year-old female with hepatoma with cirrhosis. The initial symptom was bleeding from esophageal varices. Her condition was not suitable for hepatectomy because of hypersplenism and remarkable hepatic disorder. Consequently, she was given endoscopic sclerotherapy for esophageal varices, partial splenic embolization for hypersplenism, and transarterial embolization with ADM, Lipiodol and Spongel powder for hepatoma. Although abdominal pain, pleural effusion and bleeding from gastric ulcer appeared after embolization, esophageal varices and hypersplenism were significantly improved; reduction of 75% of hepatoma was observed and AFP decreased from 18.7 ng to 3 ng. At 12 months after the embolization, there is no sign of hepatoma growth, rupture of esophageal varices or hypersplenism.
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PMID:[Transarterial embolization in the treatment of hepatoma complicated with cirrhosis, esophageal varices and hypersplenism]. 284 16

From January 1980 to January 1986 a total of 93 patients with portal hypertension (59 males, 34 females; average age 51.5 years) underwent the modified Sujura's operation. All patients presented with esophageal varices during the preoperative endoscopic workup. Child's risk category was A in 6 patients and B in the remaining 87. Our technique consisted of: (1) devascularization of the upper half of the gastric corpus and fundus; (2) devascularization of the last 10 to 12 cm of the thoracic esophagus; (3) pyloric divulsion; (4) resection and anastomosis at the esophagogastric junction; and (5) antireflux fundoplication. In the presence of severe hypersplenism we added splenectomy. The surgical approach was through a xiphoumbilical laparotomy, extended to the left side when splenectomy was anticipated. We observed 19.8% early mortality (10% with elective procedures and 27.2% with emergency operations) and two cases of early rebleeding from acute mucosal lesions. Long-term follow-up of 82 patients revealed 30 cases of rebleeding (36.6%). Ruptured esophageal varices occurred in 12 patients (11 were treated with endoscopic sclerotherapy), whereas in 11 patients the cause of bleeding was a hemorrhagic gastritis. Of the remaining patients, two had rebleeding from a gastric ulcer, one from gastric varices, one from duodenal varices; in three patients the source of the hemorrhage remains unknown. The survival for elective procedure patients was 59.2% at 5 years and 40.7% at 10 years.
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PMID:Modified Sujura operation: long-term results. 866 38