In surgery for severe GORD, the Collis procedure is required in 23% of operations; radiology helps to plan surgery; intraoperative endoscopy avoids unnecessary oesophageal lengthening.
Twenty-four-hour home esophageal pH monitoring is proposed in order to study gastroesophageal reflux (GER) so that prolonged use of costly hospital equipment and staff can be curtailed and the diagnostic accuracy of the examination improved. Eighty-six patients affected by GER symptoms and 20 healthy volunteers underwent 24-hr home esophageal pH monitoring, x-rays, and endoscopy of the upper gastrointestinal tract to investigate reliability of outpatient recording. Fifteen more patients consecutively underwent out- and inpatient recording to detect possible differences between these methods in the two daily periods. Outpatient monitoring was well tolerated in 94.7% of the patients; 14.3% of them markedly reduced their routine activities. The range of normality of outpatient recording does not differ from that of inpatients. In the 15 patients who consecutively underwent out- and inpatient monitoring, no significant differences were reported. The sensitivity of 24-hr home esophageal pH recording is 0.85, the specificity 1, the accuracy for negative prediction 0.68, and the accuracy for positive prediction 1. The reliability of 24-hr home esophageal pH monitoring is comparable to inpatient recording. It allows hospital cost reduction and is also better tolerated by patients but has not greatly improved the diagnostic accuracy of the gastroesophageal reflux pH monitoring.
The aim of our study was to evaluate the role of ultrasonography in the localization of pulmonary nodules during video-assisted thoracic surgery (VATS). Ultrasonography was performed in 35 patients for the localization of pulmonary nodules during VATS. Indication for VATS was excisional biopsy of undetermined nodules in 22 patients, single or multiple metastasectomy in 12 patients and resection of primitive pulmonary cancer in 1 patient with reduced pulmonary reserve. A laparoscopic probe with flexible head and multi-frequency transducer (5-7.5 MHz) was used. Intraoperative ultrasonography localized 37 of 40 nodules preoperatively detected by CT and/or by positron emission tomography in 35 patients. Furthermore, ultrasonography localized two nodules not visualized at spiral CT. Eighteen nodules were not visible or palpable at thoracoscopic examination and were found by intraoperative sonography only. In 6 patients in whom thoracotomy was performed, manual palpation did not reveal more lesions than ultrasonography. In our experience, ultrasonography was very helpful when lesions were not visible or palpable during thoracoscopy, showing high sensitivity (92.5%) in finding pulmonary nodules. Since it is not possible to determine preoperatively whether a localization technique will be necessary during the operation or not, and ultrasonography is a non-invasive technique, we think that, at present, this technique can be considered as the first-instance localization technique during thoracoscopic resection of pulmonary nodules.
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