An operation is indicated in patients with renal cancer growing into the inferior vena cava and right atrium because the tumor in the right atrium presents an immediate risk to life if acute obstruction of the tricuspid valve or pulmonary emboli occur. In addition, patients treated by such an operation may enjoy reasonable survivals. We believe that the best technique for operative management includes cardiopulmonary bypass, profound hypothermia and total circulatory arrest. Although perhaps seemingly complicated, it is the only technique that simplifies the operative dissection and permits as complete removal as possible of the cancer without the risk of tumor embolization or uncontrollable hemorrhage.
One hundred eighty-eight patients with acute myocardial infarction were studied prospectively from August 1980 to September 1982. One hundred thirty-six of these patients were entered into a intracoronary streptokinase study after informed consent was obtained. The remaining 52 patients, who either met exclusion criteria for the study or refused to participate, served as a control group and were treated as those in the study group except that they did not undergo emergency cardiac catheterization. Left ventricular function was determined in both groups by gated radionuclide ejection fraction (EF) on admission to the hospital, at discharge, and 6 months after discharge. With successful reperfusion up to 18 hr after onset of chest pain, mean left ventricular function in the study group improved (EF 39 + 13% on admission and 46 + 12% at discharge; p < .001). Mean EF in control patients and those not achieving reperfusion did not change from admission to discharge. Mean EF at 6 month follow-up was not significantly different than at discharge in the study group or the control group. Total cardiac mortality in the control group was 19% compared with 10% in the study group (p = .06, NS). When patients admitted in pulmonary edema or shock (Killip class III or IV) were excluded from both groups, total cardiac mortality in the study group was significantly lower (4%) compared with in the control group (12.5%, p < .05). The administration of intracoronary streptokinase during evolving myocardial infarction up to 18 hr after onset of chest pain may result in decreased mortality and sustained improvement in left ventricular function. Circulation 68, No. 1, 131-138, 1983. STANDARD CURRENT THERAPY for acute myocardial infarction entails prevention or treatment of complications secondary to evolving myocardial necrosis. Mortality during the first 30 days after acute myocardial infarction has been reported to be between 16% and 30% in large series and no definite decrease in this rate was noted between 1960 and 1975.14 Although there is no universally accepted method for reducing myocardial damage, emergency aortocoronary bypass surgery has been reported to decrease mortalityl'6 in certain patients. Intracoronary streptokinase From the University of Texas Medical School at Houston.
Colon interposition has become a favored technique for esophageal reconstruction. Late morbidity is generally related either to technical problems associated with the procedure or to the development of new disorders in the transposed segment. Two patients are discussed who were seen with obstruction of colon interposition grafts ten and five years after esophageal reconstruction. In the first patient, a volvulus of the interposed colon associated with a chronically narrowed area distal to the looped segment resulted in obstruction. In the second patient, the redundant intrathoracic segment of the colon interposition became kinked at the diaphragmatic hiatus leading to dilatation and incomplete emptying. Both patients underwent successful reoperations and are doing well 10 and 12 months later. The causes and possible prevention of these and other late complications of colon interposition are discussed.
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