1977
DOI: 10.1016/0002-9610(77)90439-1
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The risk for gastric carcinoma after partial gastrectomy

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Cited by 122 publications
(33 citation statements)
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“…These figures are in keeping with other reports [5][6][7][8] that, approximately 15 years after resection, there is an increased risk of mucosal malignancy with each subse quent year. Intuitively, this suggests a continuous carci nogenic influence.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 81%
“…These figures are in keeping with other reports [5][6][7][8] that, approximately 15 years after resection, there is an increased risk of mucosal malignancy with each subse quent year. Intuitively, this suggests a continuous carci nogenic influence.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 81%
“…Most of the clinical local recurrences of gastrointestinal tumors after resection of the primary tumor occur at the operated area of incision or anastomosis. 57,58 Whether fibrosis is accompanied with tumor or not depends on the types of collagen it produces. 59 Tumor-associated fibrosis is characterized by increased collagen Type III content; such fibrotic lesions are mostly in the early immature stage.…”
Section: Medical Devicesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…European reports have indicated an increased risk of the development of stump carcinoma with time after surgery for benign disease [4][5][6]. Several authors [6,7] have found the incidence of stump carcinoma to be unaffected by the operative procedure. But in large cohorts with long follow-up (more than 20 years after operation), it has been revealed that gastric stump Abstract Gastric stump carcinoma after gastric surgery for benign disease is now widely recognized as a distinct clinical entity.…”
Section: Epidemiological Features Of Stump Carcinomamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The mucosa in gastric ulcer patients manifests a high degree of atrophic gastritis, in contrast to that in duodenal ulcer patients, and this might account for the earlier development of carcinoma in the gastric ulcer patients [13,18]. In a large cohort, at 20 or more years after surgery, an increased risk of cancer was found in duodenal ulcer patients, as well as in those with gastric ulcer [5,7]. Janunger et al [19] showed that the differences between the remnant mucosa after duodenal and gastric ulcer surgeries vanished after about 20 years.…”
Section: Clinicopathological Features Of Stump Carcinomamentioning
confidence: 99%