Annals of surgery
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Comparative Study
Manometric diagnosis of sphincter of Oddi spasm as a cause of postcholecystectomy pain and the treatment by endoscopic sphincterotomy.
Seventeen patients with postcholecystectomy pain and nine controls were studied by nonoperative biliary manometry with stimulation of sphincter of Oddi spasm by morphine. The controls remained asymptomatic despite an elevation of bile duct pressure after morphine. In 13 patients with postcholecystectomy pain, morphine induced pain paralleling a pressure rise. ⋯ Endoscopic sphincterotomy provided complete (8), moderate (3), or slight (1) relief of pain to 12 patients with the parallel pain-pressure relationship. Postsphincterotomy manometry showed disappearance of both the pressure elevation and pain induction, and the morphine-Prostigmin test turned negative. It is concluded that morphine-induced bile duct pressure elevation coinciding with pain is diagnostic of sphincter spasm as a cause of postcholecystectomy pain, the morphine-Prostigmin test, although helpful, is less specific and less sensitive in diagnosing sphincter spasm than the manometry, and endoscopic sphincterotomy relieves the pain due to this condition in most cases.
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The previously unaddressed impact of radiotherapy and vagotomy on palliative gastroenterostomy (GE) in patients with unresectable pancreatic cancer was studied. Sixty-eight patients were retrospectively evaluated. A higher overall incidence of complications was found in the group (N = 44) undergoing irradiation as well as gastroenterostomy compared to a group undergoing gastroenterostomy alone. ⋯ Rates of bleeding were highest among patients undergoing prophylactic GE and irradiation compared to those receiving GE alone. Vagotomy in 12 patients who were irradiated did not appear to protect against bleeding. We found the irradiated prophylactic GE to provide poor palliation in patients with unresectable pancreatic cancer and recommend it not be performed if radiotherapy is to be used for attempt in local control of unresectable pancreatic cancer.
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Experiences with 14 patients undergoing rupture of the left ventricle following mitral valve replacement over a period of 9 years have been described. Three different types have been recognized. Before 1978, most injuries occurred in the atrioventricular groove, apparently resulting from traction that insidiously avulsed the mitral annulus from the underlying left ventricular muscle. ⋯ It is well realized, of course, that a fortunate narrative experience of 3 1/2 years does not have any statistical value concerning a complication that occurs in 1 to 2% of operations. The experiences are reported, however, because to our knowledge, the untethered loop hypothesis has not been previously evaluated in a large number of consecutive patients operated on. Future comparison of experiences reported by others should make it possible to determine whether or not this concept is correct.
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The results of central venous catheterization for total parenteral nutrition were prospectively evaluated in 200 consecutive patients. All catheters were fabricated of polyurethane tubing inserted by the Seldinger technique. Two hundred sixty-three lines were inserted in 200 patients for a total of 4103 days. ⋯ The total catheter sepsis rate was 5.7%. The incidence of sepsis correlated with the number of attempts to insert the line and with positive skin cultures. These data indicate that: use of the Seldinger technique to insert nonthrombogenic flexible catheters results in lower technical morbidity; the incidence of established infection is much lower than the incidence of suspected sepsis; guidewire change may be performed without risk to the patient or interruption of therapy; sepsis rates can be decreased by reducing the number of attempts to catheterize the subclavian vein; and sepsis rates correlate with positive skin cultures at the insertion site.