Zentralblatt für Chirurgie
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The primary treatment of lung cancer depends on tumor stage. Chest CT scan and bronchoscopy are used to define the TNM stage and resectability. In case of lung cancer without mediastinal lymph node enlargement or direct mediastinal involvement (clinical stage I-IIb + T3N1) surgical treatment is recommended. ⋯ In patients with resectable lung cancer and no clinical sign of tumor disease (f. e. anemia, weight loss, pain) limited staging procedure with chest CT scan including upper abdomen and bronchoscopy is reasonable. In the remaining patients complete staging is necessary. We recommend an interdisciplinary approach to patients with lung cancer.
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Surgical therapy is still the basis of therapy of patients with colon carcinoma. Multimodal therapeutical concepts are presently applied as a therapeutical standard in the adjuvant therapy and increasingly in the systemic therapy of patients with primarily inoperable metastases of the liver to reach a secondary operability. Interdisciplinary multimodal therapeutical concepts are even accepted within the therapy of metastasized colon carcinomas. There are still unanswered questions regarding sequences of palliative systemic therapies and their combinations with local ablative methods.
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Comparative Study Controlled Clinical Trial
[Value of V.A.C.-therapy in the treatment of sternal infections].
Osteomyelitis of the sternum is a dreaded complication after sternotomy and is related to high mortality. Control of infection by radical debridement is the key to successful treatment. Instability of the thoracic cage can lead to a high complication rate. 16 Patients with an infected and unstable sternum underwent radical debridement with resection of the sternum and adjacent ribs. 6 Patients (group A) received an immediate defect coverage with a pedicled muscle flap. 10 Patients (group B) were treated with a vacuum-assisted closure (V. ⋯ A. C.-therapy after radical resection of sternum osteomyelitis proved to be an effective measure to bridge time while optimizing the status of the patient and it's wound. With this approach we believe to have lowered the rate of major complications in this multi-morbid patient group by reducing the burden of one large operation and by improving thoracic stability.