Minerva chirurgica
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Review Comparative Study
Neoadjuvant treatment of oesophageal adenocarcinoma.
Oesophageal adenocarcinoma is an enigma. It has emerged, seemingly from nowhere, in the late 20th century to dominate the oesophageal oncological landscape. This review will examine whether the current outcome for adenocarcinoma is as good as it gets or whether additional treatment is necessary and if so whether neoadjuvant therapy is effective.
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Interventional magnetic resonance (IMR) machines have produced unique opportunity for image-guided surgery. The open configuration design and fast pulse sequence allow virtual real time intraoperative scanning to monitor the progress of a procedure, with new images produced every 1.5 sec. This may give greater appreciation of anatomy, especially deep to the 2-dimensional laparoscopic image, and hence increase safety, reduce procedure magnitude and increase confidence in tumour resection surgery. ⋯ Histological examination confirmed clear surgical margins of at least 1 cm in each case. Intraoperative MR scanning reliably identifies palpable breast tumours and skin sarcomas and is sufficiently accurate to guide their surgical excision. Further work may be done to develop laparoscopic and open abdominal surgery as well.