The long-term urogenital dysfunctions in 46 of 104 surviving patients submitted to abdominoperineal resection for rectal carcinoma between 1972 and 1986 were collected and assessed. Urinary retention was present in 41 percent of the men and 35 percent of women, while incontinence was present in 10 percent of men and 29 percent of women. Impotence was reported by 59 percent of the males, all sexually active before surgery. Dyspareunia was present in 50 percent of the women in the study. The possibility of treating prostatic hypertrophy concurrently with abdominoperineal resection in selected cases to avoid urinary retention is discussed. The limited number of responders to the survey may interfere with the global statistical significance.
A technique for the management of anterior flail chest consisting of osteosynthesis and the positioning of two long Kirschner wires behind the sternum in the form of a St Andrew's cross is described. The procedure is easy to perform, the patient is ambulant early, and the results are good.
The results of 164 abdominoperineal resections and 87 anterior resections carried out between 1972 and 1985 for cancer of the rectum were reviewed, assessed, and compared. The problems with anterior resection included a 1.1% hospital mortality and a 5.4% anastomotic failure rate in the 73 manual sutures and 28.5% in the 14 mechanical sutures; recurrence rate was 15.4% and the global 5-year-survival was 62%. There was no mortality in the Miles series; the recurrence rate was 4.8% and the 5-year-survival rate was 53.5%. Urogenital complications after Miles were found in 86.9%: urinary alone 10.8%, sexual alone 19.5%, both 56.5%.
Out of a series of 211 stage III (A and B) lung cancers radically resected with routine lymphadenectomy from 1971 to 1987, a total of 11 were squamous cell carcinomas invading the right main bronchus and lateral portion of the trachea. These patients were managed using a particular technique that we have always arbitrarily called, "Kergin pneumonectomy," after the Toronto surgeon who described it in 1952. These patients, today, are staged III B. There was no operative mortality and only 2 minor complications. Two patients survived 3 years and 1 is alive and free of disease 7 years from surgery. This technique should be considered before embarking on more perilous surgery such as "sleeve pneumonectomy," a procedure which still carries high mortality and morbidity rates and requires special equipment and intensive postoperative care.
Emergency portosystemic shunting has once again become a significant option in the management of bleeding esophageal varices and portal hypertension. The decision to perform such a shunt and the choice of shunt procedure requires a rational assessment of the pathophysiology and hepatoportal hemodynamics of the patient’s disease and the manner in which it is anticipated that the selected procedure may alter portal flow. Since shunt surgery may interfere with hepatic transplantation, the patient’s suitability as a future transplant recipient must also be considered in choosing a shunt procedure. Furthermore, if a shunt is to be performed on an emergency basis to control acute bleeding, this procedure must be done before the patient’s condition deteriorates sufficiently to represent a prohibitive surgical risk.
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