The data suggest that there is a correlation between vitamin A deficiency and the mechanism of asthmatic response. These data support that the mechanism of hypovitaminosis A in asthmatic children may involve not only the acute phase response but also the various degrees of chronic epitherial damage of airways.
Discussions have just started in Japan as to the indication, technique and complication of endoscopic papillectomy for tumors of the papilla of Vater.
We indicate endoscopic papillectomy for tumors satisfying the following:
exposed tumor‐type adenoma, or carcinoma in adenoma;
without invasion of duodenal muscularis; and
no infiltration into the pancreas or the bile duct.
Endoscopic papillectomy was performed on 12 patients with tumors of the papilla of Vater that satisfied the above criteria. En bloc snare excision was achieved in 11 out of 12 cases without endoscopic sphincterotomy (EST) or epinephrine injection. Pancreatic stenting was done in 8 cases for prevention of pancreatitis, and bile duct stenting in nine cases for prevention of cholangitis.
Postoperative early complications were observed in 5 cases; pancreatitis in 2; pancreatitis and bleeding in 1; bleeding in 1; and bleeding and perforation in 1. Neither recurrence nor metastasis of tumor has been detected during the average postoperative period of 620 days.
The treatment can be acknowledged as less invasive therapy. However, management of complications is important, for which further study needs to be accumulated.
To evaluate the effectiveness of endoscopic surgery for life-threatening large brain hemorrhage, we reviewed our empirical cases of comatose patients with large supratentorial intracerebral hemorrhage. Among 35 patients with putaminal or subcortical hemorrhage that was evacuated endoscopically, 14 cases (40%) presented both findings of neurological grade IV for severity and hematoma volume exceeding 70 mL in the recent 3 years (endoscope group), whereas 8 cases with the same conditions were treated by conventional craniotomy for the preceding 3-year period (craniotomy group). Between these two groups, mean age was higher and duration of surgery was shorter in the endoscope group, but no significant differences in hematoma size or evacuation rate were recognized. In the 10 cases that presented with signs of cerebral herniation (neurological grade IVb) and required emergent decompression, the preparation time for surgery tended to be shorter in the endoscope group, although the difference was not significant. Additional ventricular drainage was performed in 7 cases and showed a supplemental effect of reducing intracranial pressure (ICP). Consequently, all patients in the endoscope group were rescued without decompressive large craniectomy, even with symptoms of cerebral herniation. In conclusion, endoscopic surgery has the potential to offer an effective therapeutic option for comatose patients with large supratentorial intracerebral hemorrhages, matching conventional craniotomy for emergent treatment in terms of mortality and management of ICP.
A 17-month-old girl who had been followed up as an extremely-low-birth-weight infant presented with hepatoblastoma in the right lobe of her liver. Preoperative angiography revealed an absence of the portal vein, and the visceral venous return was through the left renal vein into the inferior vena cava. No liver dysfunction and no jaundice were found; however, a marked elevation of the alpha-fetoprotein level was noted. She underwent a typical right hepatic lobectomy successfully after chemotherapy and has no evidence of recurrence 6 months after surgery.
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