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1.
Curr Health Sci J ; 44(1): 5-13, 2018.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30622748

RESUMO

Colorectal cancer is the third most often encountered type of cancer and represents the third leading cause of cancer related deaths, on both sexes. One of the most important prognostic parameters is the tumor's stage at the time of the diagnosis. T4 cancers represent advanced tumors associated with penetration of the visceral peritoneum (T4a) and/or direct invasion in adjacent structures (T4b). Preoperative diagnosis is influenced by the inability of the existent imaging modalities to accurately differentiate the true invasion from the simple, inflammatory adherence to the neighboring structures. As a consequence surgical treatment must follow the principle of en bloc resection; however the ability of achieving an R0 resection depends on the tumor location, invaded organ, and the type of the surgical procedure required. Neoadjuvant treatment for advanced colon cancer it may be very difficult to be applied. This review is focused on preoperative workup, therapeutic strategies and subsequent results in advanced T4 colon cancers.

2.
Curr Health Sci J ; 43(1): 47-53, 2017.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30595854

RESUMO

Identification of sentinel lymph node (SLN) in colon cancer is very important in order to increase the accuracy of lymph node staging. The number of examined lymph nodes represents a significant predictor of survival. This study aims to show the importance of SLN histological and immunohistochemical examination in adjuvant oncological treatment. The study includes 23 patients with colon cancer (44% women and 56% men) who came in our clinic for surgical intervention. In all cases, the SLN was identified and prepared for histological examination. In 13 of the cases, micrometastases were found onhaematoxylin-eosin (HE) staining, there were 5 cases with positive immunohistochemistry using antibodies anti-p53, anti-VEGF-C, anti-CD34, and 5 cases with SLN negative both for HE and immunohistochemistry. Altogether we had a detection rate of 92%, an accuracy of 78,2%, a sensitivity of 90%, a false negative rate of 10% and a negative predictive value of 71,4%, good values according to the literature. Four (17,3%) patients had micrometastases exclusively in the sentinel lymph node, after performing additional histological examination, using multilevel section and immunohistochemistry. After assessing the SNL on our patients, we concluded that it is a reproducible practice for lymph node analysis.

3.
Curr Health Sci J ; 43(3): 236-240, 2017.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30595882

RESUMO

Pancreatic head carcinomas are a rare cause of upper digestive bleeding and the diagnosis and the treatment of these pose particular problems. We selected 6 cases from a number of 283 patients who were hospitalized for surgery between January 2014 and December 2016 with signs of upper digestive bleeding with no varicose origin who were subsequently diagnosed with pancreatic head carcinomas. The diagnosis was established by endoscopic and surgical methods. The evolution of these patients was influenced by whether there was active digestive bleeding or history of digestive bleeding and the possibility of tumor resection. Four patients needed emergency surgery due to continuous bleeding or rebleeding. The resectability of the cephalo-pancreatic tumor was determined and then subsequently performed in two patients who had a favorable postoperative outcome, while in two patients the tumor resection was impossible. The other two patients with upper digestive haemorrhage responded favorable to drug therapy, and digestive endoscopy and CT explorations were negative. After a 5-month interval they presented with clinical signs of a pancreatic neoplasm with invasion into the common bile duct, unwanted weight loss, abdominal pain, and icterus of the sclera and skin. The surgical intervention resulted in the confirmation of locally advanced pancreatic head carcinomas and the performing of bilio-digestive derivations. Pancreatic head carcinomas may be associated with upper digestive tract haemorrhage due to duodenal or bile duct invasion. The clinical picture of these patients can vary from occult haemorrhage to severe upper digestive tract haemorrhage accompanied by hypovolemic shock.

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