ABSTRACT
The experience is reported of two years' surgical activity carried out in hospitals for civil war victims in Battambang (Cambodia) and in an NGO hospital in Dhaka (Bangladesh) with regard to the treatment of non-acute burn patients. The aim of this report is to demonstrate that work in field hospitals deficient in means and equipment achieves the same results as those usually obtained in western hospitals. Our experience covers the surgical treatment of 200 patients with scars due to fire, acids, and land mines. We mainly treated patients with scars compromising or preventing the normal activity of limbs and extremities, with the aim of restoring correct functionality and an aesthetically satisfactory appearance.
ABSTRACT
The Soft Tissue Sarcomas shows consisting mortality that grazes 50%. Commonly the histologic type, the largeness of the tumor and the degree of malignity, are considered prognostic factors influencing the survival of patients affected from such tumor. The aim of our study is to characterize the new prognostic factors influencing the local recidives and metastatic dissemination. We have analysed 17 possible clinical and histologic prognostic factors in 80 patients affected of soft tissue sarcomas. The results have dimonstrated that: the compartimentality and the cellular differentiation seem to be more influent to the insurgence of local recidives and metastasis; while the low malignity degree, the wide surgical margins and the histopatological characters of benignity can influense positively the survival.