The pylorus-preserving technique is reported as improving the functional results of pancreatectomy but it is complicated in the early postoperative period by delayed recovery of gastric function in a proportion of patients. We have examined early and late gastrointestinal function in a prospective study of 16 patients having this procedure. The late results appear better than reported results for conventional Whipple resection and the delay in early recovery does not appear to have any late sequelae, provided that it does not require gastric bypass for relief.
Oral colon transit scintigraphy using indium-111 diethylene-triamine-pentaacetic acid was performed in 41 healthy subjects (22 females, 19 males) to determine variability with age and sex and to define normal ranges. Repeat studies were performed in 10 females and 9 males to assess intra-subject variability. Females showed slightly but significantly slower colonic transit than men and slightly greater intra-subject variability. There was no correlation between age and colonic transit. The results have implications for the definition of normal ranges.
The unusual occurrence of neonatal hypothyroidism in monozygotic twins is reported. Scintigraphy demonstrated that permanent hypothyroidism in one resulted from an ectopic suprahyoid thyroid, while in the other, the transient hypothyroid state was associated with thyroid hemiagenesis. These findings suggest that the anomalies represent variants of the same developmental aberration.
Conventional cholescintigraphy (60 patients) and a modified protocol (59 patients) were compared in 74 females and 45 males with acute cholecystitis. In the modified protocol, intravenous morphine (0.04 mg/kg) was administered whenever the gallbladder was not seen 40 minutes after injection of Tc-99m-pyridoxylideneglutamate (36/59). Accuracy was 98% with morphine, compared with 88% for the conventional protocol; specificity improved from 83% to 100% with no loss of sensitivity (96% in both groups). Low doses of morphine are well tolerated and can result in a highly accurate diagnosis of acute cholecystitis without the need for delayed imaging.
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