In patients with squamous cell carcinoma of the esophagus, the preoperative clinical staging of the N category is primarily based on the lymph node size. Lymph nodes > 10 mm are considered to be tumor-infiltrated. This histopathologic study investigated the correlation of lymph node size and metastatic infiltration in esophageal carcinoma of patients with and without neoadjuvant radiochemotherapy. The specimens of 40 patients with squamous cell carcinoma of the esophagus were included in a prospective morphometric study. Half of these patients (n = 20) received preoperative radiochemotherapy. The number of resected lymph nodes were counted, and the largest diameter of each node was measured. Metastatic involvement of each node was analyzed by histologic examination. The frequency of lymph node metastases was calculated and correlated to the lymph node size. A total of 1196 lymph nodes with an average of 29.9 nodes per patient were resected and analyzed; 129 lymph nodes (10.8%) showed metastatic infiltration. The average size of 1067 tumor-free lymph nodes was 5.1 +/- 3.8 mm in maximum diameter, whereas the average size of 129 metastatic lymph nodes was 6.7 +/- 4.2 mm (p = 0.00006). Of all resected lymph nodes, 761 (63.6%) were < or = 5 mm in maximum diameter. Only 9.3% (n = 111) of all resected lymph nodes were > 10 mm in maximum diameter. There was no significant correlation between lymph node size and the frequency of nodal metastases. No difference in size could be demonstrated between patients with and without neoadjuvant radiochemotherapy. Diagnostic imaging techniques using size as the criterion of nodal infiltration cannot exactly assess the nodal status of patients with esophageal carcinoma. This is also true for patients after neoadjuvant radiochemotherapy. Therefore, evaluation of the nodal status in patients with squamous cell carcinoma of the esophagus is entirely based on pathohistologic analysis after a well defined lymphadenectomy.
The creation of a gastric tube after subtotal esophagectomy includes resection of the lesser curvature and abdominal lymph nodes. The fundus rotation gastroplasty has been recently proposed as an alternative technique of reconstruction that preserves the vascular arcade of the lesser curvature. This study investigates the number of resected and metastatic lymph nodes associated with abdominal lymphadenectomy to assess the oncologic radicality of fundus rotation gastroplasty. In this prospective clinical trial a two-field lymphadenectomy was performed in 39 patients with squamous cell carcinoma of the esophagus. The abdominal lymphadenectomy included partial resection of compartment I (lymph node groups 1, 2, and 3) and compartment II (lymph node groups 7, 8, 9, and 11). A meticulous workup of the specimen allowed an exact classification of specific lymph node groups and their metastatic status. After two-field lymphadenectomy a total of 1170 lymph nodes (average 30.0) including 690 abdominal lymph nodes with an average of 17.7 per patient were resected. Metastatic disease was found in 27 of 39 patients (pN1 69.2%), with metastatic growth in 116 of 867 resected lymph nodes (13.4%). Of the 27 pN1 patients, 21 had abdominal lymph node metastases. Metastatic lymph nodes at the lesser curvature (groups 1, 3, and 7) were detected in 11.7%, 16.7%, and 29.7% of the resected lymph nodes, respectively. Of the 21 patients (85.7%) with abdominal lymph node metastases, 18 had positive lymph nodes at the lesser curvature. Squamous cell carcinoma of the esophagus is associated with a high rate of lymph node metastases at the lesser curvature and the left gastric artery. Therefore preservation of the lesser curvature and the left gastric artery for gastroplasty reduces the radicality regarding lymph node metastases.
In two open prospective studies, the efficacy and tolerance of ofloxacin in the prevention of infection in patients with open fractures (n = 58) and in the treatment of chronic post-traumatic osteomyelitis (n = 115) were examined. In the study with open fractures, bone and/or soft tissue infection occurred in only four cases (6.5%). During an observation period of at least 12 months, post-traumatic osteomyelitis was seen in two patients with III degree open fractures (9%), while in the groups with I degree and II degree open fractures no bone infection could be found. Therefore, the rate of post-traumatic osteomyelitis related to all patients was 3.3%. In the second study with 115 patients suffering from chronic post-traumatic osteomyelitis 141 different Gram-positive and Gram-negative pathogens were isolated. 73% were Gram-positive cocci with Staphylococcus aureus in more than 50% of the cases. An elimination rate of more than 90% was found in the Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria, leading to a clinical cure in 85% and a recurrence of infection in 5% of the cases. The tolerability of ofloxacin was excellent. No drug-related allergic reactions were observed. Diarrhoea and headache occurred in less than 2% of patients. With adequate surgical treatment, ofloxacin proved to be a useful antimicrobial agent in the prevention and therapy of bone infection.
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