Compared with the standard open technique, the endoscopic stapling technique for the treatment of Zenker diverticulum results in a statistically significant shorter operative time, hospital stay, and time to resume oral feedings. While the charges of the operative procedures were roughly equivalent, the total hospital charges were significantly less for the patients treated endoscopically.
Objective: Sinonasal undifferentiated carcinoma (SNUC) and sinonasal neuroendocrine carcinoma (SNEC) are relatively newly recognized, rare entities requiring further clinicopathological analysis to advance our understanding and determine prognostic distinctions between them. Study Design: Retrospective chart review. Methods: Cases were retrieved from the Copath system. One patient was seen in consultation from an outside institution. Histological and immunohistochemical findings, patient demographics, treatment regimens, and outcomes were analyzed and compared. Results: Ten patients (7 men, 3 women) ranging in age from 17 to 58 years (mean age, 44.7 y) were included. Four patients were classified with SNEC, six as having SNUC. The predominant site was the superior nasal cavity or ethmoids (seven cases), followed by the maxilla (four cases). Disease in four patients was clinically staged as N1 (three with SNUC, one with SNEC), and in six patients as N0 (three with SNEC, three with SNUC). Of the nine patients who were treated initially with surgical resection, seven received postoperative radiation therapy alone, one received postoperative radiation and chemotherapy, and one had only limited postoperative chemotherapy. One patient was treated with radiation therapy and chemotherapy alone, without surgical resection. Follow-up was obtained ranging from 6 to 108 months (mean period, 26.4 mo). Three patients died of disease 10, 14, and 41 months, respectively, after diagnosis. Three patients had persistent disease at 6, 9, and 21 months, respectively, two of them with distant metastases. Four patients were disease free after 6, 18, 31, and 108 months, respectively.Conclusions: SNUC and SNEC are both aggressive tumors, usually presenting in middle age as a nasal mass. Both tumors have the capacity to metastasize locally and distantly, and both can result in poor outcomes. This small series precludes a demographic or prognostic distinction between the two groups.
Background: Neonatal hemochromatosis (NH), a rare disorder seen in newborns, is defined as liver failure with extrahepatic iron deposition that spares the reticuloendothelial elements. This disorder is considered the pathologic end point of a variety of diseases that result in prenatal liver failure, and mortality without aggressive treatment is common. However, ready diagnosis remains a problem. A liver biopsy specimen showing siderosis is not specific for hemochromatosis and may be risky in patients with coagulopathy. Objective: To describe a safe and effective method for diagnosing NH that uses lower-lip minor salivary gland biopsy and can be readily performed even in the most severe cases of coagulopathy under local anesthesia. Methods: Eleven neonates with suspected NH were identified. After informed consent, a biopsy specimen of lower-lip tissue was taken under local anesthesia by the otolaryngology team. Results: Ten of the 11 neonates had minor salivary gland tissue present (or detected) by initial frozen-section analysis. One of the 11 patients required a second biopsy owing to a lack of sufficient minor salivary gland tissue on the initial specimen, underscoring the importance of frozen-section analysis. Six of 7 neonates with NH had positive biopsy findings and the seventh had a false negative. There were 4 true negatives. Three of 7 children with NH survived, 1 requiring liver transplantation and 2 with medical treatment only. Conclusion: Minor salivary gland biopsy is a safe and effective way to quickly diagnose NH, a rapidly progressive, often fatal condition.
For the first time, we have demonstrated direct revascularization of long segment tracheal autografts in the dog model using the cranial thyroid artery and internal jugular vein as the vascular supply.
The inability to reconstruct extensive and often life-threatening tracheal defects is a clinical dilemma. The objective of this study was to achieve microvascular revascularization and transplantation of long-segment circumferential tracheal allografts in a canine model. Fifteen mongrel dogs were randomly assigned to 5 treatment groups. Twelve dogs underwent an excision of an 8-cm tracheal segment followed by transplantation and microvascular revascularization of an 8-cm cervical trachea allograft. Group 1 (n = 4) was treated with 10 mg/kg per day of cyclosporin A (CsA) and 7.5 mg/kg per day of mycophenolate mofetil (MM). Group 2 (n = 4) was treated with 5 mg/kg per day of CsA and 7.5 mg/kg per day of MM. Group 3 (n = 4) was treated with 2.5 mg/kg per day of CsA and 7.5 mg/kg per day of MM. Group 4 (n = 2) underwent an autograft tracheal transplant and received postoperative 2.5 mg/kg perday of CsA and 7.5 mg/kg per day of MM. Group 5 (n = 1) did not undergo surgery, but received postoperative 2.5 mg/kg per day of CsA and 7.5 mg/kg per day of MM. The animals were maintained for a duration of 30 days, during which time the graft was assessed by routine endoscopic examination and tracheal biopsies. Ex vivo, tracheal autografts were examined grossly for graft healing and microscopically for histologic architecture. The mean survival times were 13.25 days (group 1), 16 days (group 2), and 20 days (group 3). There was 1 early allograft failure secondary to microvascular thrombosis, and there were 4 delayed failures secondary to postoperative wound infections. Five dogs were euthanized before the end of the 30-day observation period because of failure to thrive or hypocalcemic tetany. None of the dogs in the study demonstrated endoscopic or histologic evidence of rejection before euthanasia. Postmortem examination of the surviving dogs demonstrated normal histologic architecture without evidence of rejection. For the first time, we have achieved allotransplantation of long tracheal segments based on the cranial thyroid artery and internal jugular vein. Minimal systemic immunosuppression appears to be associated with a higher survival rate and a lower complication rate.
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