Journal of gastrointestinal surgery : official journal of the Society for Surgery of the Alimentary Tract
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J. Gastrointest. Surg. · Nov 2003
Epidemiology of surgically treated gastric cancer in the United States, 1988-2000.
The incidence of gastric cancer and the need for subsequent surgery has been decreasing in the United States. However, very few population-based studies on the magnitude of these changes are available. The objective of the present study was to characterize temporal trends in the use of gastric resection in the treatment of gastric cancer. ⋯ Rates of gastric resection for cancer have shown a modest decline over the past 13 years in the United States. Although the length of stay for these patients has decreased, no significant changes to in-hospital mortality have occurred. Given the declining rates of gastric cancer surgery, and the superior outcomes at high-volume centers, regionalization of care may improve mortality rates for this high-risk surgical procedure.
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J. Gastrointest. Surg. · Nov 2003
Comparative StudyOld and new TNM in carcinoma of the gastric antrum: analysis of our personal experience.
Various tumor node metastasis (TNM) classifications have been proposed for staging of gastric carcinoma, including the fourth edition of the TNM classification and the Japanese Research Society for Gastric Cancer (JRSGC) system. In 1997 the fifth edition of TNM classification introduced the concept of the number of metastatic lymph nodes. We review our experience with staging gastric cancer in light of both the fourth and fifth editions of the TNM classification system. ⋯ According to the fifth edition, the difference in survival probability was P<0.001 between N0 and N1 patients and N2 and N3 patients. The fifth TNM edition presents a greater ease of stratification in bringing together and mediating diverse cultural experiences between West and East. This staging lays the basis for a more accurate comparison between the groups.
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Asymptomatic cystic pancreatic neoplasms are being detected by abdominal imaging with increasing frequency. Enucleation of small cystic neoplasms can be performed without recurrence but has been associated with a higher incidence of pancreatic fistula. Thus the procedure has been modified to include intraoperative ultrasound imaging and closure of the pancreatic defect. ⋯ Pancreatic fistula rates (27% vs. 26%) and length of hospital stay (12.6 vs. 15.7 days) were similar in the two groups. Enucleation of benign cystic pancreatic neoplasms reduces operative time and blood loss without increasing postoperative complications or length of stay. Therefore enucleation should be the standard operation for small benign cystic neoplasms in the uncinate, head, neck, and body of the pancreas.
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J. Gastrointest. Surg. · Nov 2003
Objective psychomotor skills assessment of experienced and novice flexible endoscopists with a virtual reality simulator.
The objective of this study was to determine whether the GI Mentor II virtual reality simulator can distinguish the psychomotor skills of intermediately experienced endoscopists from those of novices, and do so with a high level of consistency and reliability. A total of five intermediate and nine novice endoscopists were evaluated using the EndoBubble abstract psychomotor task. Each subject performed three repetitions of the task. ⋯ Measures of consistency and reliability were greater than 0.8 in both groups with the exception of novice completion time where test-retest reliability was 0.74. The GI Mentor II simulator can distinguish between novice and intermediate endoscopists. The simulator assesses skills with levels of consistency and reliability required for high-stakes assessment.