Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0546837 (
esophageal cancer
)
8,907
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
During the past four years three patients have been seen with
ischemia
of the colon segment following colon interposition. Colon interposition was done for
esophageal cancer
in two patients and for esophageal stricture following ingestion of lye. Colon
ischemia
was manifested as early as two weeks in one patient and as late as eight weeks in the others. Colon
ischemia
presented a frank gangrene with cervical fistula or as dysphagia due to stricture formation. Dysphagia in two patients prompted mechanical dilatation of the colon segment which led to perforation in both cases. All three patients had empyemas. The management of these patients includes proper diagnosis, drainage of abscesses and antibiotic treatment, hyperalimentation and visceral arteriography to delineate the residual colon for reinterposition. Two of the three patients in the series are long-term survivors and are well.
...
PMID:Management of colon ischemia following colon interposition for esophageal substitution. 9 13
One hundred and five colonic interpositions were performed in 102 patients. The indications for operation were caustic stenosis in 57 cases (Group A) and
esophageal cancer
in 45 patients (Group B). The right colon was used in 97 cases and isoperistaltic transverse colon in 8 cases. Eighty-nine transplants were anastomosed to the cervical esophagus and 16 to the pharynx. The distal anastomosis was to the antrum in 67 cases, to the second duodenum in 37 cases, and to the jejunum in 1 case. The overall mortality rate was 8.6 percent (9 cases), 5.3 percent (3 cases) in group A and 13.6 percent (6 cases) in group B (p less than 0.05). The morbidity rate was significantly higher in group B than in group A (77.3 percent vs 53.7 percent, p less than 0.05). Ischemic necrosis (3 cases) and chronic
ischemia
of the transplant (7 cases) were the major complications. Strictures occurred at the proximal anastomosis significantly more often in group B (63 percent) than in group A (40 percent) (p less than 0.05). Seven failures occurred in 93 survivors, i.e. oral feeding was impossible. In conclusion, mortality and morbidity rates of coloplasty are high. The use of colon as an esophageal substitute is justified only in case of caustic stenosis with unavailable stomach.
...
PMID:[Use of the colon for esophageal substitution. Mortality and morbidity. Report of 105 cases]. 228 73
The tracheo-bronchial mucosa of 27 surgical patients with
esophageal cancer
was examined by bronchofiberscope postoperatively, and the changes of the mucosa were divided into four grades, i.e., GI: no change or slight redness only (7 cases), GII: Severe redness or erosion (7 cases), GIII: Ulcer formation (11 cases) and GIV: Necrosis of the mucosa (2 cases). All the GI-III changes were reversible. However, GIV change was irreversible. The biopsy specimens were taken from the mucosa of the tracheal bifurcation on the 7th postoperative day, showing squamous metaplasia in 9 of 13 patients. Bilateral modified neck and upper mediastinal lymph node dissections were performed in 18 of 27 patients. The change of the mucosa was judged as GIII or IV in 12 of 18 patients (67%), whereas the change was less significant in the remaining 6 patients. Namely, the degree of mucosal change did not necessarily correspond with the extent of lymph node dissection. The changes of the mucosa were considered to be brought about not only by tracheo-bronchial
ischemia
but also by injurious effects on the pulmonary parenchyma following aggressive lymph node dissection. The assessment of the degree of the mucosal change might be a useful indicator for postoperative management of
esophageal cancer
patients.
...
PMID:[A study on the changes in the tracheo-bronchial mucosa after esophagectomy for esophageal cancer; with special reference to the influence of neck and upper mediastinal lymph node dissections]. 260 15
A case of 54-year-old man with tracheal stenosis following surgery for thoracic
esophageal cancer
was reported. It was considered that the stenosis had occurred due to the tracheal
ischemia
after esophagectomy and lymph node dissection. Importance of preservation of tracheal blood supply was again noticed. On tracheal reconstruction, application of pedicled pleural flap was recognized to be useful in order to repair the leakage from membranous portion that could not be closed by suture.
...
PMID:[A case of tracheal stenosis following surgery of esophageal cancer]. 261 27
A 47-year-old patient developed severe digital arteritis after complementary bleomycin treatment following surgery for
esophageal cancer
. Arteriography images showed extrinsic stenosis of the digital arteries, results of other investigations suggesting development of a sclerodermic process due to bleomycin. Ischemic lesions regressed after thoracic sympathectomy. Similar cases have been well documented but cases of associated cancer and digital
ischemia
lacking iatrogenic features have also been reported. The pathogenic role of bleomycin appears to be established in the present case, but the possibility of the digital
ischemia
developing within the framework of a paraneoplasic syndrome is discussed.
...
PMID:[Digital arteritis and bleomycin. Apropos of a case]. 619 94
Recently, with increase of number of esophagectomy for
esophageal cancer
, the cases having the lesion in the organs for esophageal substitute have been increasing. The case of
esophageal cancer
, required reconstruction using the pedicled jejunum, because of impaired submucosal blood perfusion of the stomach caused by a ulcer scar, was reported. The patient was a 72-year-old female, with the ulcerative and infiltrative cancer lesion in the anterior wall of the mid-thoracic esophagus. Barium swallow revealed shortening of the lesser curvature and indentation of the greater curvature of the stomach. Endoscopy showed the lesion occupying anterior two thirds of the esophageal wall circumferentialy from 30 to 34 cm from the incisor tooth. The lineal scar of ulcer on the lesser curvature of the body of the stomach was also found. Following esophagectomy through right thoracotomy, the stomach was mobilized for reconstruction by dividing left gastric artery and short gastric artery, but the stomach oral to the ulcer scar became ischemic and bleeding was not found at the tip of the stomach. Therefore, reconstruction was performed using the pedicled jejunum through antesternal route. The gastric cardia is rich in the vascular network in the submucosal layer. The ulcer or ulcer scar of this region can cause
ischemia
in the tip of the gastric tube for esophageal substitute. Care should be taken to detect the ulcer lesion at the stomach preoperatively. In the case with the ulcer lesion blood supply to the tip of the gastric tube should be critically evaluated.
...
PMID:[A case of esophageal cancer required jejunal reconstruction because of a gastric ulcer scar]. 855 Oct 77
Poor perfusion of the gastric substitute in esophageal replacement frequently causes anastomotic break down. In this in vivo study we assessed gastric microperfusion before, during, and after gastric tube formation by means of laser Doppler flowmetry in 11 patients undergoing esophagectomy for
esophageal cancer
. Baseline blood flux along the greater curvature was 323 +/- 57, 167 +/- 28, and 190 +/- 44 perfusion units (PU) and along the lesser curvature 222 +/- 44 and 227 +/- 46 PU. Blood flux was significantly higher in close proximity to tumor-infiltrated areas (819 +/- 172 and 879 +/- 119 PU, P < 0.03 and P < 0.008 compared to normal stomach). Dissection of the gastrocolic ligament and the left gastric artery reduced gastric blood flux along the greater curvature to 69 +/- 21, 79 +/- 19, and 155 +/- 61 PU. Elongation and transformation of the stomach to a gastric tube further reduced blood flux in the stomach especially at the fundus. In this study laser Doppler flowmetry was a valuable tool to assess microcirculatory changes during gastric tube formation as well as pathological blood flow in tumor bearing areas of the stomach in vivo. Quantification of the perfusion of gastric tubes in esophageal replacement might help prevent
ischemia
-induced anastomotic breakdown.
...
PMID:Gastric microcirculatory changes during gastric tube formation: assessment with laser Doppler flowmetry. 860 99
Esophagogastric anastomotic leaks are a major cause of morbidity and mortality after esophagectomy. Occult
ischemia
of the mobilized and partially devascularized gastric fundus is an important cause of esophagogastric leaks. The author hypothesizes that the vascularity of the gastric fundus can be improved, and anastomotic leaks reduced, by a process of ischemic conditioning (delay phenomenon). Laparoscopic partial gastric devascularization could be performed 2-3 weeks before esophagectomy. The gastric fundus would have time to re-establish an abundant blood supply before being mobilized and anastomosed to the esophagus. Since laparoscopic partial devascularization could be done at the time of laparoscopic cancer staging, gastric ischemic conditioning would not necessarily add cost or morbidity to the overall treatment of
esophageal cancer
. Laboratory and clinical evidence are presented to support this hypothesis.
...
PMID:Ischemic conditioning of the stomach may reduce the incidence of esophagogastric anastomotic leaks complicating esophagectomy: a hypothesis. 928 83
Esophagectomy followed by gastric tube reconstruction is the surgical treatment of choice for patients with
esophageal cancer
. Complications of the cervical anastomosis are associated with impaired microvascular blood flow (MBF) and
ischemia
in the gastric fundus. The aim of the present study was to differentiate whether the decrease in MBF is a result of arterial insufficiency or of venous congestion. To do this we assessed MBF, microvascular hemoglobin oxygen saturation (muHbSo(2)), and microvascular hemoglobin concentration (muHbcon) simultaneously during different stages of gastric tube reconstruction. In 14 patients, MBF was determined with laser Doppler flowmetry, and muHbSo(2) and muHbcon were determined with reflectance spectro- photometry. After completion of the anastomosis, nitroglycerin was applied at the fundus. Although MBF did not change significantly in the pylorus, MBF decreased progressively during surgery in the fundus from 210 +/- 18 Arbitrary Units at baseline (normal stomach) to 52 +/- 9 Arbitrary Units after completion of reconstruction (mean +/- sem; P < 0.05). There was no change in muHbSo(2) and muHbcon during the reconstruction. After application of nitroglycerin, MBF doubled. We conclude that MBF decreases during gastric tube reconstruction but that muHbSo(2) and muHbcon do not. This decrease might be the result of venous congestion, which can partly be counteracted by application of nitroglycerin.
...
PMID:The effect of nitroglycerin on microvascular perfusion and oxygenation during gastric tube reconstruction. 1578 29
An aberrant right subclavian artery is an uncommon anomaly. When associated with
esophageal cancer
, it can cause diagnostic confusion as the symptoms are similar. If unrecognized and injured during esophageal surgery, it can lead to disastrous complications. We report a patient in whom this aberrant artery was injured during a thoracoscopic mobilization of the esophagus. The embryological and radiologic aspects of this anomaly and its clinical significance are discussed. Pre-operative diagnosis will require a high index of suspicion, as the clinical and radiological features are not specific. If injury occurs, an immediate vascular reconstruction will prevent limb
ischemia
and hence knowledge of this entity is of utmost importance.
...
PMID:Injury of an aberrant subclavian artery: a rare complication of video assisted thoracoscopic esophagectomy. 1578 67
1
2
3
Next >>