Annals of surgery
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To determine the effects of hypothermia and rewarming on changes in the villus microcirculation induced by intestinal ischemia-reperfusion (I/R). ⋯ Hypothermia might prove to be an effective strategy for preventing adverse side effects in clinical settings in which intestinal I/R can be predicted.
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Review Meta Analysis
A meta-analysis on the efficacy of preoperative biliary drainage for tumors causing obstructive jaundice.
To review the effectiveness of preoperative biliary drainage (PBD) in patients with obstructive jaundice resulting from tumors. ⋯ This meta-analysis shows that PBD with current standards for patients with obstructive jaundice resulting from tumors carries no benefit and should not be performed routinely. The potential benefit of PBD in terms of postoperative rates of death and complications does not outweigh the disadvantage of the drainage procedure. Only if PBD-related complications could be reduced by 27% and consequently diminish hospital stay could PBD be beneficial. Further randomized controlled trials with improved PBD techniques are necessary.
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Comparative Study
Role of cyclase activating parathyroid hormone (1-84 PTH) measurements during parathyroid surgery: potential improvement of intraoperative PTH assay.
Quick intraoperative parathyroid hormone assays are widely used as a guide to the adequacy of resection during parathyroid surgery. However, some authors have reported a 15% error rate of these assays because of the presence of false-positive and false-negative results. Recently the authors have found that most commercial intact PTH (iPTH) assays cross-react with non-(1-84) PTH (likely 7-84 PTH) and that the proportional levels of non-(1-84) PTH in patients were variable in a much wider range, accounting mostly for 20% to 60% of the immunoreactivity in samples obtained from hyperparathyroid patients. A cyclase activating PTH (CAP) measured by a novel immunoradiometric assay was shown to measure specifically 1-84 PTH. Using a CAP assay, the authors studied the rate of decline of CAP after parathyroidectomy and compared it with iPTH as measured by the Nichols intact PTH immunoradiometric assay. ⋯ The percentage of 7-84 PTH in iPTH in plasma samples varies substantially between patients with HPT. In both pHPT and secondary HPT, the plasma CAP value decreased more rapidly than iPTH after parathyroidectomy, depending on the amount of 7-84 PTH in circulation. These results suggest that the CAP assay may be a more useful adjunct to parathyroidectomy than the currently used iPTH assay.