Medical science monitor : international medical journal of experimental and clinical research
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Definitive chemoradiation (without surgery) is an accepted treatment for esophageal cancer. Persistent or recurrent local disease is not infrequent after chemoradiation, and this is its greatest drawback. Selected patients with isolated local failures of definitive chemoradiation can be salvaged by esophagectomy. ⋯ We propose modifications of surgical practice that may reduce complications. These include strict guidelines for patient selection, conservative mediastinal dissection, prevention of intraoperative lung injury (barotrauma and oxygen related toxicity), near total esophagectomy with cervical esophagogastric anastomosis, anterior mediastinal reconstruction, judicious use of staged reconstruction, perioperative enteral nutritional support, and aggressive detection and treatment of postoperative complications. By conceptually breaking the operation into component parts, such as resection and reconstruction, and then modifying each component to minimize complications, we believe that the operative mortality of salvage esophagectomy can
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Combined epidural-propofol anesthesia with use of noninvasive positive pressure ventilation (NPPV) via the nose has been used routinely in our operating theaters. The purpose of this report was to present a survey of this anesthesia. ⋯ The principle of our anesthesia consists of epidural anesthesia, sole propofol infusion and noninvasive airway management, so as to provide an anesthetic technique with minimal invasiveness. Although airway maintenance by NPPV is not always suitable, our anesthesia is practicable for certain kinds of operations.