Bladder cancer is a heterogeneous disease that includes both tumors with low risk of dissemination as well as highly malignant tumors with a considerable potential to metastasize. The patient's quality of life is closely related to the management of the disease. The challenge for the urologist is to acknowledge the malignant potential of the cancer and to adjust the approach to the patient accordingly. Patients with low-risk bladder cancer should avoid an exaggerated follow-up, but on the other hand high-risk patients must be sufficiently surveyed to secure that definitive surgical treatment is performed before it's too late. When the decision to perform a cystectomy has been made, it is crucial that the patient understands the consequences of the surgery as well as the possible options for urinary reconstruction. This review focuses on aspects of bladder cancer management that we believe are vital for the quality of life of these patients.
This survey indicates that 12% of patients with severe acute heart failure are potential candidates for VAD-treatment. Extending these figures to a national level, indicate that approximately 70 patients per year could be candidates for short-term VAD-treatment in Norway.
Purpose: To compare two clinically relevant anaesthetic agents, i.e. isoflurane versus propofol with respect to protection of the kidney in a porcine renal ischemia reperfusion model. Materials and Methods: 14 hybrid pigs were randomized to anaesthesia with either isoflurane or propofol prior to laparoscopic surgery. Following anaesthesia, the left kidney hilum was clamped for 60 minutes and the right kidney removed. After 48 hours of reperfusion, urine was sampled for analysis of neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin (NGAL), albumin and creatinine. The left kidney was harvested for histologic scoring of injury. Results: Histologic examination of renal injury revealed a statistically significant difference in favour of isoflurane on denuded basement membrane score (isoflurane group 1.58 ± 0.38 vs. propofol 2.42 ± 0.80, p=0.026). Median (25-75 percentile) urinary albumin 3.4 g/l (2.25-7.48) vs. 8.9 g/l (3.73-13.8), (p=0.041) and urinary albumin/creatinine ratio 1.17 (0.76-1.82) vs. 1.76 (1.63-5.99), (p= 0.026) were both significantly lower in the isoflurane group. Median (25-75 percentile) urinary NGAL was 167 (51-215) pg/ml in the isoflurane group compared with 362 (149-508) pg/ml in the propofol group (p= 0.093). Conclusion: Isoflurane increases tolerance to renal ischemia reperfusion injury compared to propofol in this model.
Early urinary incontinence remains a major source of morbidity for patients undergoing robotic prostatectomy. The purpose of the study was to determine whether the introduction of a suspension stitch would improve early urinary continence rates in patients undergoing robotic prostatectomy for localized prostate cancer at our department. We retrospectively reviewed patients undergoing robotic prostatectomy with either suspension (n = 119) or figure-of-eight (n = 48) stitching of the dorsal venous complex. The patients submitted EPIC-26 questionnaires before surgery and after 3 and 18 months, respectively. Logistic regression analysis was run to determine the effect of the suspension stitch, nerve-sparing, posterior reconstruction, prostate volume, age and body mass index on early continence rate. The odds ratio of experiencing urinary leaks was 2.1 times higher (95% CI 1.0–4.3) in the figure-of-eight stitch group compared to the suspension stitch group 3 months after surgery (p < 0.05). The early urinary continence rate was 61.3% in the suspension stitch group compared to 35.4% in the figure-of-eight stitch group (p < 0.005). There were no differences between the groups 18 months post-prostatectomy (90.7% in the suspension stitch group versus 81.4% in the non-suspension stitch group, p = 0.1). Ordinal regression analysis identified the suspension stitch, bilateral nerve-sparing and body mass index as independent predictors of urinary continence at 3 months. The association between urinary continence and either unilateral nerve-sparing, posterior reconstruction, prostate volume or age did not reach statistical significance. Our results suggest that the suspension stitch improved early urinary continence following robotic prostatectomy.
During the last three decades, the most prevalent surgical mitral valve disease in Scandinavia has changed from the sequelae of rheumatic fever to the mitral valve pathologies related to ischemic heart disease. Also, the total number of patients in need of a mitral valve procedure is increasing. For several of the patients with ischemic mitral valve disease, the natural prognosis of their disease is dismal. However, there are several uncertainties as to whether or not a surgical procedure can improve the life expectancies of these patients. Also, the procedures of choice for patients with ischemia related "functional mitral valve disease" is a long standing controversy. In this issue of "Scandinavian Cardiovascular Journal" we present the rationale and protocol for the "MoMIC" trial, a randomized multicenter study aiming to clarify whether revascularization alone or a combined revascularization and mitral valve annuloplasty is the treatment of choice for patients with ischemia related moderate mitral regurgitation.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
hi@scite.ai
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.