Aim:The purpose of this study was to assess the value of Doppler evaluation of left gastric vein hemodynamics when monitoring portal hypertension patients, by correlating Doppler ultrasonography (USG) parameters with the severity of esophageal varices and occurrence of variceal bleeding.Methods:This study was carried out on 100 patients using Doppler USG and endoscopy. Forty-seven of these were patients with cirrhosis with portal hypertension, who had not had a recent variceal bleed (group 1) and 26 were patients with cirrhosis with portal hypertension, with a recent history of bleeding (group 2). The control group comprised of 27 subjects who did not have liver disease or varices on endoscopy (group 3). The hemodynamic parameters, namely the diameter of the left gastric vein and the direction and flow velocity in the vessel, were compared in these groups, with the grade of esophageal varices.Results:Hepatofugal flow velocity in the left gastric vein was higher in patients with large-sized varices compared to those patients with small-sized varices (P < 0.001). The left gastric vein hepatofugal flow velocity was higher in patients with a recent variceal bleed than in those patients without a history of a recent variceal bleed (P < 0.0149). Large-sized varices were more commonly found in patients with a history of a recent variceal bleed (P < 0.0124).Conclusion:Left gastric vein hemodynamics were found to correlate with the severity of the varices and the occurrence of recent variceal bleed in patients with cirrhosis with portal hypertension. Evaluation of the left gastric vein portal dynamics could be helpful in monitoring the progress of the disease in these patients.
Introduction: Neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NACT) in carcinoma stomach was introduced in an effort to eliminate micro-metastasis and to improve resectablity before surgery which improves R0 resection rates. We aimed to study the short term outcomes of neoadjuvant chemotherapy on the Tumor Node Metastasis (TNM) stage and the operative outcomes including R0 resection rate in locally advanced gastric cancer.
Methods: We prospectively included patients with locally advanced adenocarcinoma stomach staged by contrast-enhanced computed tomography (CECT) in our study. Patients in Group I were started on neoadjuvant chemotherapy (epirubicin, oxaliplatin, and capecitabine). Surgery was done following response assessment CECT. Patients in Group II underwent upfront surgery. We assessed R0 resection rate, number of harvested and metastatic lymph nodes, lymph node ratio, duration of surgery, blood loss, hospital stay and complications between two groups. Response to NACT was assessed in Group I.
Results: Out of 47 patients who received NACT, two patients had complete response (4.2%), 13 had partial response (27.7%), 10 had stable disease (21.3%) and 22 patients had progressive disease (46.8%). We found no significant difference in the rate of R0 resection between the two groups (88.2% in NACT group vs 85.1% in surgery group, P=0.55).
Conclusions: The rate of R0 resection does not significantly improve with neoadjuvant chemotherapy. In view of high progression rates, patient selection is required when NACT is planned in carcinoma stomach which are surgically resectable at presentation. We await survival analysis to further validate the role of NACT.
Amelanotic signet ring cell melanoma is one of the rare variants of malignant melanoma. Here we are presenting a case of a 58-year-old female with chief complaints of swelling in the left sternal region/breast, and right cervical region. Contrast Enhanced CT scan showed the two well circumscribed lobular mass lesions with central necrosis in the left breast. The radiologist opined the lesions as intramammary nodes. Biopsy from the larger breast mass lesion showed a tumour with cells arranged in discohesive pattern less with hetrogenos morphology. These tumour cells had a predominantly signet ring morphology along with markedly pleomorphic tumour cells and giant cells. These tumour cells were negative for pan CK and positive for S100, HMB45. So the case was diagnosed as metastatic amelanotic malignant melanoma with signet ring morphology.
Background Motor neuron diseases cause progressive degeneration of upper and lower motor neurons. No Indian studies are available on diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) findings in these patients.
Aims This study was done to identify white matter tracts that have reduced fractional anisotropy (FA) in motor neuron disease (MND) patients using tract-based spatial statistics and to correlate FA values with Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis Functional Rating Scale (ALSFRS-R) score.
Settings and Design A case–control study in a tertiary care hospital.
Materials and Methods We did DTI sequence (20 gradient directions, b-value 1,000) in 15 MND patients (10 men and 5 women; mean age: 46.5 ± 16.5 years; 11 amyotrophic lateral sclerosis [ALS], 2 monomelic amyotrophy, 1 progressive muscular atrophy, and 1 bulbar ALS) and 15 age- and sex-matched controls. The data set from each subject was postprocessed using FSL downloaded from the FMRIB Software Library, Oxford, United Kingdom (http://www.fmrib.ox.ac.uk/fsl).
Statistical Analysis The statistical permutation tool “randomize” with 5,000 permutations was used to identify voxels that were different between the patient data set and the control data set. Mean FA values of these voxels were obtained separately for each tract as per “JHU white-matter tractography atlas.” SPSS was used to look to correlate tract-wise mean FA value with ALSFRS-R score.
Results We found clusters of reduced FA values in multiple tracts in the brain of patients with MND. Receiver operating characteristic curves plotted for individual tracts, showed that bilateral corticospinal tract, bilateral anterior thalamic radiation, bilateral uncinate fasciculus, and right superior longitudinal fasciculus were the best discriminators (area under the curve > 0.8, p < 0.01). FA values did not correlate with ALFRS-R severity score.
Conclusion In MND patients, not only the motor tracts, but several nonmotor association tracts are additionally affected, reflecting nonmotor pathological processes in ALS.
ACTA2 mutations are recently described genetically defined abnormalities of blood vessels in various organs of the body with specific abnormalities in cerebral vessels in the form of straightening of all cerebral arteries (“twig-like” pattern), stenosis/occlusions, proximal dilatation, and absent “moyamoya” type of collaterals. We describe a one-and-a half year-old girl child who presented with mild motor developmental delay and on neuroimaging showed septo-preoptic holoprosencephaly, diffuse radial polymicrogyria, and pontine hypoplasia along with magnetic resonance angiographic features suggestive of ACTA2 mutation type of cerebral vessels. However, genetic studies revealed no evidence of ACTA2 mutation, indicating that the “twig-like” pattern may not only be a pathognomonic feature of ACTA2 mutations.
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