Annals of surgery
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The development of miniaturized electronic pressure transducers and portable digital data recorders with large storage capacity has made ambulatory monitoring of esophageal motor function over an entire circadian cycle possible. The broad clinical application of this new technology in a large number of asymptomatic normal volunteers and patients with primary esophageal motor disorders or gastroesophageal reflux disease provides new insights into esophageal motor function in health and disease under a variety of physiologic conditions. In normal volunteers and symptomatic patients, esophageal motor activity increases with both the state of consciousness and eating activity, i.e., from sleep to awake to meal periods. ⋯ These data suggest that ambulatory esophageal motility monitoring allows for a more precise classification of esophageal motor disorders than standard manometry and can identify abnormal esophageal motor pattern associated with nonobstructive dysphagia, noncardiac chest pain, or gastroesophageal reflux. Ambulatory esophageal manometry therefore should replace standard manometry in the assessment of esophageal body function and has potential to improve the diagnosis and management of patients with esophageal motor abnormalities. The combination of ambulatory 24-hour esophageal manometry with esophageal and gastric pH monitoring is currently the most physiologic way to assess patients with functional foregut disorders.
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Pancreatic cystic lesions include inflammatory pseudocysts, benign serous tumors, and mucinous neoplasms, some of which are malignant. Clinical and radiologic indices are often inadequate to discriminate reliably among these possibilities. In an attempt to develop new preoperative diagnostic criteria to assist in decisions regarding therapy, the authors have performed cyst fluid analysis for tumor markers (carcinoembryonic antigen: CEA, CA 125, and CA 19.9), amylase content, amylase isoenzymes, relative viscosity, and cytology on 26 pancreatic cysts. ⋯ The authors conclude that cyst fluid analysis can provide a preoperative classification of these diagnostically difficult lesions. The combination of viscosity, CEA, CA 125, and cytology can reliably distinguish malignant cystic tumors and potentially premalignant mucinous cystic neoplasms from pseudocysts and serous cystadenomas. Amylase content with isoenzyme analysis is useful to identify pseudocysts.
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The relationship between blood transfusion, disease-free survival, and other potential prognostic factors was prospectively studied in 339 consecutive patients with colorectal cancer. Admission and discharge hematocrit, Dukes' stage, and blood loss were significantly related to both blood transfusion and disease-free survival. Using Cox proportional hazards model, however, the association of transfusion with disease-free survival was significant (p = 0.0196) after controlling for age, sex, blood loss, procedure, tumor differentiation, stage, admission hematocrit, duration of surgery, length of the specimen, and tumor size. ⋯ Five-year disease-free survival of the transfused patients was 57%, compared with 77% for nontransfused patients. Patients who developed recurrence received an average of twice as much blood as patients without recurrence (1.26 versus 0.61 units, p = 0.0128). Perioperative blood transfusion is a significant independent prognostic factor for colorectal cancer.
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Surgical and radiologic techniques from computed tomography (CT) scanning and embolization to temporary gauze packing and mesh hepatorrhaphy have been developed to make the management of severe liver injuries more effective. Surgical approaches for severe liver trauma have been oriented to two major consequences of these injuries: hemorrhage and infection. Early attempts at hemorrhagic control found benefit only in temporary intrahepatic gauze packing. ⋯ Prophylactic drainage of severe liver injuries is a concept for which there is little evidence of benefit. Furthermore, recent radiologic developments appear capable of draining those collections that do occasionally develop in the postoperative period. The ultimate challenge of liver transplantation for trauma has been attempted, but the experience is thus far very limited.
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Editorial Comment
Continuing evolution in the approach to severe liver trauma.