Between 1968 and 1984 liver resection with curative attempt was performed in 22 patients with hilar cholangiocarcinoma. Right lobectomy was performed in 4 patients, extended right lobectomy in 7, left lobectomy in 8, and excision of the median segment segment of the left lobe (segment IV) in 3. Bilio-enteric continuity was restored by hepatocholedochostomy in 17 patients and hepatojejunostomy in 4. (One patient had external transhepatic catheter drainage and no internal bile drainage.) Operative mortality rate was 27% and caused by excessive intraoperative bleeding, sepsis, or liver insufficiency. Postoperative complications occurred in 57% of patients surviving the operation and were due mainly to leakage from the hepatocholedochostomy. Median survival was 6 months, and one third of the patients survived 1 year. Three patients survived 10 years and were among the four patients in whom a tumor-free resection margin was obtained (one of them died in the postoperative phase). It is concluded that resection of hilar cholangiocarcinoma may give long-term survival if a free resection margin is obtained. The importance of a free resection margin indicates that surgery should be aggressive and include liver resection.
The records of 80 consecutive patients with extrahepatic bile duct cancer, 45 women and 35 men, median age 70 years (33-89 years), were reviewed. The histologic diagnoses were adenocarcinoma in 45 patients, 34 cholangiocarcinoma and one squamous cell carcinoma. In 34 patients the tumor was located to the confluence, the right or left hepatic duct, in 16 to the middle and in four to the distal portion of the bile duct. In the remaining 26 patients the tumor comprised more than one of these locations (mixed location). Twenty-seven of the 80 patients (34%) were operated on with resection of the tumor. Among patients 70 years of age and younger the resectability rate was 57%. In nine patients the main surgical procedure was bile duct resection, in 15 patients bile duct resection and liver lobe resection, in 2 patients total pancreatectomy and in one local excision were performed. The resection of the tumor was regarded as radical in 12 patients and palliative in 15. The mortality rate was 11% after resection as compared to 30% in patients with nonresectable tumors. The most common postoperative complication was insufficiency of the anastomosis which occurred in seven patients. Three of these patients required reoperation. The median survival time in patients operated on with radical resection was 20 months, palliative resection 7(1/2) months and in patients with nonresectable tumors 2(1/2) months. The quality of life was estimated according to a special schedule and was found to be improved after resection as compared to nonresection. Patients operated with radical resection spent significantly less of their remaining life at hospital as compared to palliatively resected patients or patients with nonresectable tumors.
USASUMMARY Basal pressure and relaxation of the lower oesophageal sphincter (LOS) as well as amplitude, duration and propagation velocity of peristaltic waves in the distal third of oesophagus were measured in 15 healthy adults (nine men and six women). A highly standardised technique was used employing manometric equipment including a low-compliance pneumohydraulic infusion system and a triple lumen recording catheter. After establishment of baseline manometry values the catheter was positioned with its distal orifice in the lower oesophageal sphincter. In 10 subjects 0.2 mg/kg body weight of morphine sulphate was then injected subcutaneously. In five others equal volume of saline was given. The manometric data were analysed blindly. Repeated manometric evaluations were carried out 15, 30, 45, 60, and 75 minutes after the injection. Morphine increased slightly LOS-pressure and significantly (p<0.001) decreased LOS-relaxation, the maximal effect occurring 30 minutes after the injection. Amplitude of peristaltic waves increased slightly but insignificantly, whereas propagation velocity and duration were uninfluenced. The results of this study suggest that pharmacologic doses of morphine influence normal function of the LOS and possibly the distal oesophagus. The role of endogenous opiates in this respect, however, awaits further studies. It is suggested that abnormalities in opioid neurotransmission may explain some of the non-specific oesophageal motility disorders.It has recently been shown that the oesophageal smooth muscles in addition to adrenergic and cholinergic nerves contain enkephalin immunoreactive nerves.1 Evidence has also been presented suggesting the existence of enkephalin (opiate) receptors in the lower oesophageal sphincter of the opossum.2 3 As endogenous opioid-like peptides (endorphins) have been identified in the central and enteral nervous system4 5 the physiological significance of these findings remains to be clarified.Stacher et a16 studied the influence of a synthetic metenkephalin analogue, FK 33-824 on oesophageal motor activity in healthy humans. Their results support a role for enkephalins in the regulation of the oesophageal wave amplitude, duration and propagation velocity. The lower oesophageal sphincter was, howvever, not studied. The aim of the present study was to investigate the effects of
In 39 patients with severe attacks of acute pancreatitis, a longitudinal study was done with respect to the influence of peritoneal lavage on objective prognostic signs (WBC, blood-glucose, serum-calcium, hematocrit, serum-creatinine, arterial pO2, base deficit); amylase activities in peritoneal fluid, serum, and urine; serum-hemoglobin, serum-Na, serum-K, and plasma-insulin. In addition to standard care in the ICU, half of the patients (N = 19) were randomly treated with peritoneal lavage. Peritoneal lavage did not influence overall mortality (13%), incidence of major complications (36%), or hospital stay (23 +/- 7 days). None of the prognostic signs was significantly influenced by lavage. Amylase concentration in peritoneal fluid was significantly reduced in the lavaged group after 6 hours compared to 24 hours in controls. Serum and urinary amylase decreased 12 hours earlier in the lavaged group, indicating an efficiency of the lavage procedure per se. Still, this study did not reveal any beneficial clinical effects of peritoneal lavage in acute pancreatitis.
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