Segmental arterial mediolysis is an unusual arterial lesion for which pathogenesis has remained controversial. We report on a 47-year-old Japanese woman who underwent surgery for an abdominal aortic aneurysm that was 10.5 cm in diameter and contiguous with a left common iliac aneurysm that was 2.3 cm in diameter; the aneurysms were considered to have progressed rapidly in size. Pathologic examinations of the respective aneurysms showed cystic medial necrosis in the aortic and segmental arterial mediolysis in the iliac aneurysm. Coexistence of these two pathologic findings indicates that there may be a strong relation between these two disease entities.
The thoracic cage after a lung resection is filled by the remaining lobes, the elevated diaphragm, the diminished thoracic cage, and by mediastinal shifting. The changes in the thorax after a lung resection were quantified using magnetic resonance imaging. The study group consisted of 39 patients who had undergone a lobectomy, four who had undergone a pneumonectomy, and 14 controls. The left ventricular angle, ascending aortic angle, mediastinal shift, longitudinal length of the thoracic cage, the distance between the thoracic apex and the level of the aortic valve, and diaphragmatic elevation were all measured. After a right lower lobectomy, the mediastinum shifted more rightward than after a right upper lobectomy. The diaphragm became more greatly elevated after a right upper lobectomy than after a right lower lobectomy. When a chest wall resection was added to a right upper lobectomy, the mediastinal anatomical changes decreased. After a left upper lobectomy, the degree of mediastinal shifting was greater than after a left lower lobectomy. A left upper lobectomy shifted the mediastinum at the level of the right atrium. This method is easily reproducible and was found to be effective for quantifying the changes in the thorax after a lung resection.
To explore the anatomical repositioning of the middle lobe following right upper (RU) lobectomy, we measured the lobar volumes of the lung and the branching angles of the airway, and defined their changes after RU lobectomy in a rabbit model. Groups A1 (n = 10) and A2 (n = 10) were control groups and groups B1 (n = 10) and B2 (n = 10) underwent RU lobectomy. Casting material was introduced into the airway and a heart-lung bloc was removed form the thoracic cavity in all groups. In groups A1 and B1, the volume of each lobe of the bilateral lungs was measured, while in groups A2 and B2, bronchial casts were made and the branching angles of the airway were measured. The volume ratio of the right upper lobe (RUL) to the total lung was 12.0 +/- 0.4% in group A1; however, after RU lobectomy, the volume ratio of the right middle lobe (RML) to the total lung increased from 8.7 +/- 0.6% in group A1 to 13.5 +/- 0.8% in group B1. The volume of the left lung also increased from 43.0 +/- 0.5% in group A1 to 48.8 +/- 1.1% in group B1. The angle between the truncus intermedius and the RML bronchus was significantly smaller in group B2, at 109.0 +/- 3.5 degrees, than in group A2, in which it was 138.5 +/- 1.7 degrees. The angle between the RML bronchus and the coronal plane was 57.5 +/- 2.5 degrees in group A2 and 33.5 +/- 3.3 degrees in group B2. Our method of measuring the bronchial branching angle subsequent to RU lobectomy proved useful to illustrate postoperative positional changes and expansion of the remaining lobes.
Tumors with a maximum dimension of 3 cm are categorized as T1, whereas those greater than 3 cm are T2 by TNM classification. Some physicians suggest that early-stage peripheral lung cancer should have a maximum tumor diameter of 2 cm and that limited surgery (segmentectomy without lymph node dissection) is acceptable for the patients. In this study, the relationship between the tumor dimension and prognosis was analyzed in 207 patients with surgically treated primary non-small-cell lung cancer (SCLC). The 5-year survival rate of those with tumors 3 cm or less and without lymph node (LN) metastases was 86%, which was significantly higher than that of those with tumors more than 3 cm and without hilar and mediastinal LN metastases (65%) (p < 0.05). However, 33% of the patients with tumors 3 cm or less had LN metastases, and the 5-year survival rate did not differ between those with tumors 3 cm or less (60%) and those with tumors more than 3 cm (54%). Twenty-eight percent of patients with tumors 2 cm or less had LN metastases, and the 5-year survival rate of the patients with tumors 2 cm or less was 62%. The 5-year survival rate of those with tumors 2 cm or less and without LN metastases was 88%. Forty-six patients with tumors 2 cm or less included 5 cases with an intrapulmonary metastasis in the same lobe (11%). In conclusion, a size of 3 cm is an appropriate boundary as the T factor. Because those with tumors 2 cm or less have a relatively high percentage of LN metastases, intraoperative frozen sections of LN should be considered for those undergoing limited surgery for primary non-SCLCs 2 cm or less. Intrapulmonary metastases also should be considered for those undergoing limited surgery even if the maximum dimension of the primary tumor is less than 2 cm.
Paramedian incision induced severe rectus abdominis muscle atrophy. Although flank incision induced various degrees of atrophy in both muscles, some patients had no muscle atrophy. These data indicate that further anatomic investigation into the relation between flank incision and abdominal wall innervation may contribute to prevention of muscle atrophy after flank incision.
We report a rare case of a spontaneous rupture of the iliac vein which was then surgically treated with good results. A 66-year-old woman was admitted complaining of leg swelling and lower abdominal pain. On the 3rd day after admission, an operation was performed because of a gradually increasing hematoma in the retroperitoneal space. Laparotomy revealed a 17 mm longitudinal tear on the anterior surface of the left external iliac vein with a thrombus inside the lumen. Most of the previously reported 14 cases of this nature have required emergency operations.
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