A case is presented of anterior mediastinal bronchogenic cyst associated with adenocarcinoma arising from the cyst wall. The presence of a solid component in the lower portion of the mass was suspected from CT and confirmed by MRI.
Preoperative chemotherapy is commonly used for small cell lung cancer or advanced non-small cell lung cancer. This study was conducted to investigate the effects of preoperative antineoplastic agents on the postoperative would healing of bronchial anastomoses in a rat model. Cisplatin (CDDP), doxorubicin (ADM), or cyclophosphamide (CPA) was administered either 3 days preoperatively (experiment 1) or 7 days preoperatively (experiment 2). Wound healing was assessed on postoperative days (POD) 3, 5, and 7 after anastomosis of the bronchus, by examining the bursting strength and hydroxyproline tissue content. In experiment 1, significant impairment of wound healing was seen on POD 3 in the CPA-treated rats, but no significant changes were seen in the other groups. Severe leukopenia and marked reduction of macrophage infiltration into the wound were also observed in the CPA-treated rats. The impairment of wound healing coincided with the time of leukopenia and reduced macrophage infiltration into the wounds. In experiment 2, induction chemotherapy did not impair wound healing. Our experimental results suggest that preoperative chemotherapy producing mild leukopenia, or when followed by a sufficient interval to allow for the recovery of myelosuppression, did not impair wound healing of the bronchial anastomoses. The findings of this study also showed that the depletion of macrophages at the anastomotic site is one of the most important causes of impaired wound healing.
A 46-year-old female patient was referred to our hospital for endoscopic treatment of stenotic pancreatogastrostomy. She had undergone pylorus-preserving pancreatoduodenectomy due to duodenal carcinoma of the papilla of Vater 5 years before referral. Two years after the operation, she had to be hospitalized several times during a 1-year period because of acute recurrent pancreatitis caused by stenosis of the anastomosis of the pancreatoduodenostomy. An endoscopic ultrasound (EUS)-guided rendezvous technique was selected to puncture the main pancreatic duct via a transgastric approach. We identified the dilated main pancreatic duct with a convex array echoendoscope from the lower gastric body near the anastomosis and successfully punctured the dilated main pancreatic duct. The guidewire passed through the stenosis to the gastric cavity and we could place a stent through the stenotic anastomosis. After the procedure, the patient has not experienced acute recurrent pancreatitis for 9 months. Pancreatogastrostomy has been the preferred method used to carry out post-pancreatoduodenectomy reconstruction. However, stenosis of the anastomosis has been reported as one of the late complications of pancreatogastrostomy. The main symptom of this complication is recurrent epigastralgia due to obstructive pancreatitis. As a result, patients are compelled to stay in the hospital for an extended duration with no oral intake allowed. Surgical resection of the stenosis is often the treatment of choice but can be troublesome due to post-operative adhesions. Here, we report a case of pancreatogastrostomy complicated by stenosis, which was treated using the EUS-guided rendezvous technique.
Our study suggests that induction chemotherapy, associated with leukopenia in the early phase of wound healing, increases the risk of bronchial anastomosis leakage. Postoperative macrophage depletion is one of the most important causes of impaired wound healing.
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