Two adjuvant techniques for the intraoperative assessment of small intestinal viability were compared with standard clinical judgment in a prospective, controlled study of 71 ischemic bowel segments in 28 consecutive patients operated on for acute intestinal ischemic disease. Each segment was independently assessed 15 minutes after surgical correction of the underlying lesion by: 1) standard clinical judgment; 2) Doppler-detected pulsatile mural blood flow; and 3) fluorescein ultraviolet fluorescence pattern. Viability endpoint for each segment was determined objectively by patient follow-up or "blinded" microscopic evaluation of histologically unequivocal resection specimens using criteria established by previous animal studies. Seventeen histologically equivocal specimens were excluded from the final results. Standard clinical judgment proved moderately accurate overall (89%) but would have led to a relatively high rate (46%) of unnecessary bowel resection. The Doppler technique did not increase accuracy in any category of evaluation. The fluorescein fluorescent pattern was correct in all 54 determinant bowel segments, and proved more sensitive specific, predictive, and significantly more accurate overall than either standard clinical judgment or the Doppler method. This controlled study suggests that the fluorescein technique is the method of choice for the prediction of small intestinal recovery following ischemic injury.
Two cases of mucoepidermoid carcinoma of the bronchus--one a low grade tumor and the other a high grade tumor--are presented with findings by light and electron microscopy. This represents the first report of the ultrastructure of mucoepidermoid carcinoma of the bronchus and demonstrates the ultrastructural similarities between the low grade exophytic tumor confined to the bronchus and the high grade infiltrating tumor with lymph node and pulmonary metastases. The ultrastructural features are similar to those described for mucoepidermoid carcinoma of the salivary gland and are consistent with the proposed origin of the tumor from the submucosal bronchial gland duct. These two cases and a review of previously reported cases indicate that, analogous to mucoepidermoid carcinoma of the salivary glands, mucoepidermoid carcinoma of the bronchus may occur as either a low grade or high grade variant which can be identified on the basis of growth characteristics and histologic features.
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