A new method of endoscopic ultrasound (EUS) guided fine needle aspiration using an ultrasonic endoscope with a curved array transducer mounted in front of the optic lens was developed. As a result of the sector shaped sound field and the direction of the scanning plane it was possible to visualise ultrasonically a needle inserted through the biopsy channel. EUS guided biopsy was performed in 37 patients (with 39 lesions) using three types of needles. Based upon initial testing of several prototype needles a 160 cm long, 0.8 mm diameter needle placed in a Teflon catheter was developed after preliminary results with the first two types were unsatisfactory (positive results for malignancy in 3/11 and 4/8 cases). The third prototype was tested in seven patients with malignant tumours of the upper GI tract. In these patients EUS guided biopsy was positive for malignancy in 7 of 8 solid lesions. Problems related to the technique and criteria for a successful outcome are discussed. The preliminary results show that it is possible to advance a needle into a malignant lesion inside or outside the GI wall during EUS examination and aspirate material for cytologic examination from various lesions. Controlled studies are needed to determine the indications for use and the accuracy of the technique.
We report here the first case of a one-step endosonography(EUS)-guided pseudocyst drainage. A prototype large channel curved array echo endoscope (Pentax FG-38 UX) and a prototype delivery system for placement of an endoprosthesis was used for the procedure. The delivery system (GIP MedicinTechnik GmbH/Medi-Globe Corporation) consists of a handle part with a piston, a metal ring sheath, a plastic catheter with a diathermy needle and a double pigtail endoprosthesis (8.5 Fr). When mounted on the endoscope the endoprosthesis can be advanced out of the distal end of the endoscope. The introduction of the stent as well as the stent release can be monitored entirely by ultrasound. The procedure was tested in a 76-year-old woman with a pseudocyst measuring 60 mm in diameter located in the tail of the pancreas. The procedure was well tolerated by the patient, and there were no procedural complications. The advantage of a large channel echo endoscope and our new prototype delivery system is that the endoprosthesis can be inserted in to a pancreatic cyst guided exclusively by EUS without exchange of endoscopes, catheters or guide wires. Further studies are warranted.
Metastases to the breast from extramammary carcinomas. Acta path. microbiol. scand. Sect. A, 89: 251-256, 1981. Metastases to the breast from extramammary carcinomas are rare. Only about 200 cases are reported in the literature. Fifteen additional cases are presented here and the literature is reviewed. Two of the patients had primary thyroid carcinoma, two adenocarcinoma of the colon, three bronchogenic carcinoma, four malignant melanoma, one a squamous cell carcinoma of the oesophagus, one an adenocarcinoma of the stomach, one a renal cell carcinoma and one a carcinoid of the terminal ileum. In three cases the breast lesion was the first manifestation of an extramammary cancer. Six of the patients died of disseminated cancer shortly after the breast metastasis was diagnosed. Although breast metastasis may be suspected clinically, exact histological diagnosis is important in order to avoid unnecessary surgical treatment and to guide further therapy.
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