The implantation of new self-expanding mesh stents (20 mm in diameter, when fully expanded) in a 67-year-old woman with extensive esophageal cancer stenosis is reported. Prosthesis insertion was easily accomplished without the need for general anesthesia. The patient has been doing well since. The potential advantages of the new stenting procedure suggest further investigation.
During a four-year period up to May 1993, 118 patients (mean age 69 years) with malignant bile duct stenoses were treated with a total of 127 selfexpanding 10-mm metal endoprostheses (Wallstent), most of them endoscopically (n = 102). Technical problems during and shortly after implantation occurred in five cases (4.2%), but could all be solved endoscopically. Serum bilirubin decreased from a mean of 8.0 mg/dl at presentation to a mean of 2.0 mg/dl after stenting. Nineteen patients died within the first three months (5% within the first 30 days); recurrent obstruction, as manifested by recurrent jaundice or cholangitis, or both, was encountered in 14%. Fifty-one patients who survived longer were followed up until death or for a minimum of 12 months (mean follow-up: 12 months). Stent patency rates in this group were 86% (six months), 72% (12 months) and 64% (18 months), survival for these time periods being 63%, 35% and 17%, respectively. No significant stent-related complications were noted; stent occlusion occurred in 12% of patients after a mean of 168 days, and was successfully managed endoscopically (thermal cleaning, implantation of further stents) in all cases. We conclude from our long-term follow-up data that patients surviving longer than three months are the ones most likely to benefit from Wallstent insertion for malignant jaundice.
This report describes a newly available endoscopic system, the purpose of which is to inspect the common bile duct, gallbladder, cystic duct and the pancreatic duct with the aid of retrograde endoscopy. A miniscope examination of the gallbladder was carried out in eight out of ten autopsy specimens, and the entire pancreatic duct was inspected in nine out of ten specimens after successful transpapillary catheterisation. The procedure described in this paper opens up a new diagnostic and therapeutic approach to the gallbladder, biliary tree and the pancreatic duct.
A 44-year-old man, a known alcoholic and heavy smoker, was hospitalized with high fever and respiratory failure which a few hours later required intubation and artificial ventilation, although the chest x-ray had been unremarkable. Later serial chest x-ray films showed intrapulmonary infiltrations, while Legionella Bozemanii was demonstrated by direct immunofluorescence. Cranial computed tomography was unremarkable, despite the onset of tetraparesis and a severe midbrain syndrome. Cerebrospinal fluid contained merely mild lymphocytic pleocytosis. However, magnetic resonance imaging revealed symmetrical demyelinization foci in the brainstem as a sign of encephalitis. The neurological deficits regressed almost completely after several weeks of antibiotic treatment and rehabilitation measures over several months.
For the first time, human pancreas specimens (18 autopsy specimens, three resection specimens) were examined with high-resolution, flexible ultrasound catheters (20 MHz; 3.5 F, 4.8 F, 5.0 F and 6.0 F external diameters; mechanical and electronic systems). The ultrasound catheter was easily inserted into the pancreatic duct in all specimens. The sonographic tissue texture was correlated with its histological picture at defined positions. A high resolution was thus achieved in the sonomorphological differentiation of blood vessels, duct system elements, fibrotic tissue, fatty tissue and pancreas tissue with varying lipomatous composition. In a radius of an average of 5.5 mm, structures 0.1 mm large were recognised. Contrast media studies of the ductal system were carried out before and after ultrasound examination. No evidence of trauma due to catheterisation was found either with these studies or by histology. In one case, a 15 mm serous microcystic adenoma of the pancreatic head was found at intraductal examination of the resection specimen. Clinical examinations within the framework of endoscopic retrograde pancreaticography must clarify if the intraductal ultrasonography technique presented here can truly enlarge the diagnostic, repertoire used in the search of tiny focal pancreatic lesions.
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