Neuroendocrine tumours (NET) frequently metastasise to the liver (NLM) and are associated with significant morbidity and mortality. Numerous treatment options have been implemented both for cure, and to implement disease control. Surgical treatment includes curative resection, palliative cytoreductive resection and transplantation. Complete surgical resection is only possible in a subset of people with NLMs due to excessive metastatic burden and anatomical location. Ablative therapies may be used either as an adjunct to surgery or as a primary treatment. The purpose of the following article is to summarise surgical treatment strategies in the management of patients with hepatic neuroendocrine metastases, based on the available literature.
Acquired unilateral alacrima as a presenting sign of an intracranial tumor is exceptionally rare, and only described once previously in a case of nasopharyngeal carcinoma. The authors present a 32-year-old female patient who presents with a year-long history of alacrima and arhinorrhea. She was subsequently diagnosed with a petroclival chondrosarcoma extending into Meckel’s cave and the cavernous sinus and underwent surgical debulking. To the authors' knowledge, this is the first reported case of acquired unilateral alacrima as a presenting feature of a skull base chondrosarcoma. This case serves to remind general ophthalmologists and oculoplastic surgeons alike that acquired alacrima may be the presenting feature of serious intracranial disease.
A 73-year-old man presented to the surgical assessment unit with recurrent episodes of central abdominal pain and vomiting for 18 months. He has the past medical history (PMH) of hypertension and has been using his denture for 35 years; he had no past surgical history; he drinks alcohol socially and not a smoker. This patient was investigated for iron deficiency anaemia with upper and lower gastrointestional endoscopy, as the patient had positive faecal occult blood; rectal biopsy showed no sign of inflammation and no evidence of malignancy; blood investigation showed Hb 9.8 g/dl, white cell count 14.8, mean cell volume 86.3, mean cell haemoglobin 26.9 and C reactive protein 13. This patient underwent a CT scan of the chest, abdomen and pelvis; the latest one showed that there is a short segment of the middle part of the small bowel that looks thickened and within which there is a high-density calcified shadow which is reported as an ingested foreign body or a tooth fragment; the patient underwent laparotomy and the histology results revealed 30 mm well differentiated/moderately differentiated adenocarcinoma.
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