Recently a number of surgeons have recommended radical resection of gastrinomas in Zollinger-Ellison syndrome (ZES). We have developed a useful technique for preoperative localization of gastrinomas--the selective arterial secretin injection test (SASI)--and we recommend an intraoperative secretin test (IOS) for deciding the radicality of resection of gastrinomas. Here the results of SASI and IOS tests in 11 patients with ZES are examined and compared with the results of other techniques. The SASI test localized gastrinomas in all of the patients, while the sensitivity of ultrasonography, computed tomography, arteriography, or portal venous blood samplings was between 1/11 and 5/11. On the basis of the results of the SASI test, radical resection of gastrinoma was performed in four patients (three pancreatoduodenectomies and one extirpation). After pancreatoduodenectomy, immunohistologic study of the specimen revealed multiple microgastrinomas and lymph node metastases in two patients and the coexistence of a microgastrinoma and a gastinoma in one patient. The IOS test was useful in the estimation of the advisability of radicality, and in two patients total gastrectomy was not performed because of the results of the IOS test. These four patients are well and have returned to work, and their serum gastrin levels are below 35 pg/mL. Thus we believe SASI and IOS tests are helpful for planning curative resection of gastrinomas.
The effects of three FK506 induction regimens on pediatric living-related liver transplantation (LRLT) were studied retrospectively in terms of patient survival and adverse side effects. The patients consisted of 120 children, ranging from 3 to 210 months of age, who underwent a total of 122 LRLTs with a minimum follow-up of 6 months. Immunosuppression consisted of FK506 and low-dose steroids. FK506 was given in 3 ways: (1) high-dose intravenous (i.v.) induction, with FK506 begun at a dose of 0.15 mg/kg/day for the first 16 patients; (2) low-dose i.v. induction, with FK506 begun at a dose of 0.06 mg/kg/day for the next 45 patients; and (3) per os (p.o.) induction, with FK506 begun orally from the day prior to LRLT and continued postoperatively. Whole-blood trough levels of FK506 were monitored daily. Trough levels in the high induction group were often as high as 100 ng/ml compared with the level of 20 ng/ml in the p.o. induction group. Patient survivals were 75%, 89%, and 80% in the high-i.v. vs. low-i.v. vs. p.o. groups. The incidences of acute rejection were 12.5%, 22.2%, and 26.4%, and the incidences of viral infection were 56%, 38%, and 11% in the respective groups. Major adverse effects occurred with higher frequency in the high-i.v. induction group. Oral FK506 induction therapy at a dose of 0.15 mg/kg/day starting from the day before LRLT was safer and associated with a lower incidence of viral infection than therapy with i.v. FK506.
During rain, transient puddles form on roads, and this water is splashed into the air by moving vehicles. To determine whether this water contains Legionella pneumophila, we collected samples from roads. We found that L. pneumophila are abundant in these puddles, especially during warm weather.
Nine pediatric patients (mean age, 10 years) with biliary atresia, who had hypoxemia related to intrapulmonary shunting, underwent living related liver transplantation. The effects of hypoxemia during the early postoperative period after liver transplantation on cardiopulmonary and renal function, as well as on transplanted liver, were analyzed. Based on the degree of shunt ratio calculated by technetium-99m macroaggregated albumin scintigraphy, the nine patients were included in the moderate group (shunt ratio under 40%, n=4) or the severe group (shunt ratio over 40%, n=5). Partial pressure of arterial oxygen was maintained at normal range in the moderate group, while that in the severe group persistently had very low values (<50 mmHg), in spite of a high degree of oxygen supply. However, all patients in the severe group maintained stable cardiopulmonary vital signs, including systemic blood pressure, heart rate, respiratory rate, and cardiac index. They also demonstrated stable renal function. None of the patients died of cardiopulmonary or renal insufficiency after transplantation, but three patients died of portal vein thrombosis, sepsis, and intracranial hemorrhage (one each). The minimal adverse effect of hypoxemia on the transplanted liver was confirmed by a rapid increase of arterial ketone body ratio, low peak values (under 200 IU/L) of aspartate aminotransferase, and a steady decrease of serum total bilirubin. Four patients encountered surgical complications, including two bile leaks from the cut liver surface, two leaks from bilioenteric anastomosis, and one intestinal perforation. Six patients suffered from bacterial infections, including four wound infections, three right subphrenic abscesses, one cholangitis, and two systemic sepses. All patients in the moderate group recovered from hypoxemia, but four of five patients in the severe group have not recovered during the follow-up period between 4 and 9 months. It was concluded that the adverse effects of hypoxemia on cardiopulmonary and renal function and transplanted liver were minimal, so that patients with severe hypoxemia could tolerate the stress of liver transplantation without special management. However, the high incidence of surgical complication and infection suggested the adverse effects of hypoxemia on wound healing and resistance to bacteria infection.
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