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1.
Minerva Chir ; 55(1-2): 77-87, 2000.
Article in Italian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10832290

ABSTRACT

A case of a young male operated on for acute appendicitis due to a carcinoid of the base is reported. Since the tumor was infiltrating the resection margin of the appendix, the patient was later treated with a right hemicolectomy. Carcinoid tumor is unusual, but can be encountered several times during the career of a surgeon (1/200-300 appendicectomy). The tumor is more frequent in women (2-4:1), located at the tip of the appendix (62-78%) and has a diameter less than 1 cm in 70-95% of cases. It is more frequently diagnosed incidentally after an operation for acute appendicitis and occasionally during other procedures (colectomy, cholecystectomy, salpingectomy). Liver metastases are rare (< 2%), related to the dimension of the primitive tumor (21-100% when > 2 cm) and can cause a "carcinoid syndrome": flush, diarrhea bronchoconstriction, cardiac valve disease. Diagnosis is made by the pathologist and staging by conventional radiologic procedures (TAC, US), dosage of neuroendocrine mediators such as 24 hours urinary 5-HIAA. Nowadays 111In-octreotide scintigraphy (SRS) has an 86% sensitivity to detect the carcinoid and is useful for staging and for planning a surgical intervention. Simple appendectomy is adequate treatment for appendiceal carcinoids less than 1 cm in diameter. Adequate treatment for tumors greater than 2 cm is right hemicolectomy. A point of controversy is what to do for tumors in the 1 to 2 cm range. It seems that appendectomy alone is sufficient except in those cases when mesoappendiceal invasion is identified. When surgical margins after appendectomy are not free of tumor, additional surgery seems warranted. Carcinoid tumor of the appendix has a good prognosis with a 5-year-survival rate, of 85.9-100%. When liver metastases are encountered octreotide can relieve symptoms and sometimes the progression of the disease.


Subject(s)
Appendiceal Neoplasms/surgery , Carcinoid Tumor/surgery , Abdomen/diagnostic imaging , Adult , Age Factors , Appendectomy , Appendiceal Neoplasms/diagnosis , Appendiceal Neoplasms/pathology , Appendix/pathology , Carcinoid Tumor/diagnosis , Carcinoid Tumor/pathology , Female , Follow-Up Studies , Humans , Indium Radioisotopes , Male , Octreotide , Radionuclide Imaging , Radiopharmaceuticals , Sex Factors , Time Factors , Tomography, X-Ray Computed
2.
Minerva Chir ; 54(9): 573-89, 1999 Sep.
Article in Italian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10549204

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: In the last years the real innovation in the treatment of groin hernia is represented by tension-free hernioplasty under local anaesthesia, based on the techniques of Lichtenstein and Trabucco, which use synthetic prosthesis (polypropylene) to restore the floor of inguinal tract and enable an early deambulation and return to work. METHODS: In 21 months the authors have treated, only under local anaesthesia, 100 patients, 95 men and 5 women; the age ranged from 18 to 82 years; some of them suffer from systemic pathology (7 patients with cardiovascular diseases, 1 with epilepsy, 3 with pulmonary diseases, 1 with liver cirrhosis). All patients underwent short-term antibiotic prophylaxis. No mortality was recorded. The mean follow-up was 12.5 months with only one little and low recurrence detected. RESULTS: Good results were obtained also in terms of intraoperative complication (nausea, vomiting, bradycardia, pain) and post-operative complications, (ecchymosis of scrotum and penis, edema of the scrotum, swelling of the skin suture, subcutaneous hematoma, inguinal pain, fever), not life-threatening, well tolerated and resolved spontaneously. CONCLUSIONS: The authors stress the advantages of local anaesthesia, the economic spare due, to one day hospital stay, the safety of the technique also in patients with severe general diseases (0.9-1% in USA). The authors survey the international literature confirming the great effectiveness of tension-free inguinal hernioplasty, in particular in terms of recurrences (Trabucco 0-0.025%, Amid 0.1%).


Subject(s)
Anesthesia, Local/methods , Hernia, Inguinal/surgery , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Female , Follow-Up Studies , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Polypropylenes , Preoperative Care/methods , Surgical Mesh , Surgical Procedures, Operative/methods
3.
Acta Chir Scand ; 156(2): 167-9, 1990 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2184635

ABSTRACT

The merits of mechanical versus manual anastomosis were evaluated in a prospective study of 48 patients undergoing resection of colonic or rectal cancer. The analyzed factors included the time required for construction of the anastomosis, the length of hospital stay, the cost/benefit ratio and complications. The anastomosis was manually performed with monolayer polyglactin 910 sutures in 24 cases and mechanically with an E.E.A. stapler in 24. The anastomosis time averaged 14 min in the suture group and 14.3 min in the stapling group, and the respective hospitalization times were 16 and 17 days. The mean cost was 48,000 lire in the manual, and 200,000 lire in the mechanical group. Four complications occurred in each group. Apart from the cost, no intergroup difference was statistically significant.


Subject(s)
Adenocarcinoma/surgery , Anastomosis, Surgical/methods , Colonic Neoplasms/surgery , Postoperative Complications/etiology , Rectal Neoplasms/surgery , Surgical Staplers , Suture Techniques , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Prospective Studies , Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic , Surgical Wound Dehiscence/etiology
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