Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0243026 (sepsis)
52,417 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Over a three-year period, 1980-82, 79 per cent of our patients with rectal cancer were treated with the intention of cure, and sphincter-saving procedures were performed in 62 per cent of these cases. This report concerns 21 patients with mid-rectum cancer operated on with low anterior resection and extraperitoneal EEA-stapled anastomosis. Nine patients had Dukes' stage A tumors, seven had stage B, and five had stage C tumors. An 86-year-old woman died in the sixth postoperative week, and a 74-year-old man died after 20 months with a probable recurrence. Nineteen patients are currently alive 4 to 40 months post-operatively, with no overt signs of recurrence. We cannot confirm recent alarming reports on a significant incidence of early local recurrence. Routine Gastrografin enemas were performed and offered very little in terms of clinical guidance. Significant anastomotic leakage occurred in four patients, although without clinical symptoms or the need for fecal diversion. Despite initially intact anastomoses in 13 patients, pelvic sepsis with late dehiscence developed in three, all of whom required fecal diversion. The clinical leak rate was thus 3 of 21, 14 per cent, and the total incidence of leakage 7 of 21, 33 per cent. We performed routine colostomy on the first three patients but, in retrospect, believe this was unneccessary. Only one of the 19 survivors still has a colostomy, due to a benign anastomotic stricture. We consider anterior resection of mid-rectum carcinoma with EEA-stapled anastomosis a highly feasible procedure, the curative potential of which, however, can be established only by long-term follow-up studies.
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PMID:EEA stapler for mid-rectum carcinoma. Review of recent literature and own initial experience. 664 59

The technique of the Turnbull-Cutait pullthrough procedure as performed at the Cleveland Clinic for carcinoma of the rectum and other conditions is described. The results in 127 patients are reported. Eighty-four patients were operated upon for cancer of the rectum and 47 for miscellaneous benign conditions. The average distance of tumors from the anal margin was 7.6 cm. The average margin of resection was 4.1 cm. The overall operative mortality was 1.2% in the cancer group. Ischemic necrosis occurred in 1.2% of the cancer patients, and minor pelvic sepsis occurred in 7.1%. The five-year survival in Dukes' A, B and C carcinoma of the rectum was 100%, 57% and 53%, respectively. The incidence of pelvic recurrence of the tumor at 6% was within acceptable limits. The quality of bowel function following the pullthrough procedure is discussed. It is concluded that this pullthrough procedure has a significant role in the management of carcinoma of the rectum and other conditions.
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PMID:The Turnbull-Cutait pullthrough procedure for certain cancers of the rectum and Hirschsprung disease. 725 Nov 72

Twenty-one patients had a concurrent splenectomy with resection of colorectal cancer between 1970 and 1988. These were matched individually with disease control patients based on age, sex, site of tumor, Dukes stage, tumor differentiation, and date of the operation. Significantly more patients in the splenectomy group (n = 11) developed postoperative infective complications than in the control group (n = 4) (McNemar test: P = 0.03). Five-year overall actuarial survival was 45 percent in the former group and 59 percent in the latter (log rank test: chi-squared = 1.07; P = 0.24). Similarly, five-year disease-free survival in 17 patients with Dukes B and C cancers who had curative resections did not differ between the groups (log rank test: chi-squared = 0.08; P > 0.25). These results suggest that splenectomy with resection of colorectal cancer increases the risk of postoperative sepsis and does not influence long-term survival. The infrequency of concurrent splenectomy at resection of colorectal cancer may not overcome Type II error.
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PMID:Does concurrent splenectomy at colorectal cancer resection influence survival? 768 67

Of 361 patients who survived curative left colonic or sphincter-saving rectal resection for cancer, 44 developed significant postoperative intra-abdominal sepsis and 317 did not. The two groups were well matched for age, sex, site of tumour, Dukes stage, tumour differentiation and timing of operation. There was no significant difference in the 5-year overall actuarial survival rate (P = 0.25) or in the 5-year disease-free survival rate (P = 0.23). Stepwise regression analysis of prognostic variables including age, sex, site of tumour, Dukes stage, tumour differentiation, timing of operation, grade of surgeon and postoperative intra-abdominal sepsis identified Dukes stage, age at operation and tumour differentiation as predictors of survival. These results suggest that postoperative intra-abdominal sepsis is not a prognostic factor for long-term survival in colorectal cancer as has been previously reported.
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PMID:Intra-abdominal sepsis and survival after surgery for colorectal cancer. 804 21


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