International journal of oral and maxillofacial surgery
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Int J Oral Maxillofac Surg · Mar 2004
Case ReportsThe peripherally inserted central venous catheter; friend or foe?
The use of a peripherally inserted central catheter (PICC) is now commonplace in clinical practice both for monitoring and intravenous administration of drugs or fluids. The authors describe the case of a complication not previously reported following placement of a PICC prior to a head and neck procedure. The literature on complications following PICC use is reviewed.
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Int J Oral Maxillofac Surg · Mar 2004
The status of the deep surgical margins in tongue and floor of mouth squamous cell carcinoma and risk of local recurrence; an analysis of 68 patients.
The objective of this study is to retrospectively assess the clinical relevance, i.c. the event of a local recurrence, in patients surgically treated for tongue and floor of mouth squamous cell carcinoma when tumour cell are observed histopathologically at a distance of less than 0.5 cm. Furthermore, the pattern of invasion and the presence or absence of perineural spread were recorded. A total of 68 patients, surgically treated because of a tongue or floor of mouth squamous cell carcinoma, were examined. ⋯ Local recurrence occurred in 2 out of 30 patients with a free surgical margins >0.5 cm and in 3 out of 38 patients with a free surgical margin <0.5 cm, the difference being not statistically significant. Apparently, the presence of tumour cells within a distance of less than 0.5 cm, but not into the deep surgical margin, does not necessarily seem to require additional treatment. The pattern of invasion and the presence or absence of perineural spread were not significantly related with local recurrence either.