Seminars in surgical oncology
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Peripheral nerve injuries can result from mechanical, thermal, chemical, congenital, or pathological etiologies. Failure to restore these damaged nerves can lead to the loss of muscle function, impaired sensation, and painful neuropathies. Current surgical strategies for the repair of critical nerves involve the transfer of normal donor nerve from an uninjured body location. ⋯ Semin. Surg. Oncol. 19:312-318, 2000.
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The underlying principle of the surgical treatment of non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) is complete removal of the local/regional disease within the thorax. Pulmonary resection should be as conservative as possible without compromising the adequacy of tumor removal. A multitude of factors influence the incidence and severity of complications following pulmonary resection including the pre-operative physical and psychological status of the patient, the pathologic process requiring resection, the physiologic impact of the procedure, and the addition of pre-operative or postoperative adjuvant therapy. ⋯ New therapeutic strategies that may impact on outcomes in the adult population include pressure-limited ventilation (permissive hypercapnia), inverse ratio ventilation, high-frequency jet ventilation, high-frequency oscillatory ventilation, intratracheal pulmonary ventilation, and prone position ventilation. In addition, alternative therapies such as partial liquid ventilation, inhaled nitric oxide, and extracorporeal techniques including extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO), extracorporeal carbon dioxide removal (ECCO(2)R), intravascular oxygenation (IVOX), and arteriovenous carbon dioxide removal (AVCO(2)R), provide additional modalities. A component of some or all of these strategies is finding a role in clinical practice.
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Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer death in the United States. The persisting grim lung cancer incidence and mortality figures argue powerfully for new approaches such as chemoprevention for controlling this disease. Retinoids are among the most intensively studied cancer chemoprevention agents, including in the lung. ⋯ Recently completed lung-second-primary-tumor-prevention trials include the retinoids retinyl palmitate and 13-cis-retinoic acid (13cRA) and N-acetylcysteine (NAC). Vitamin E and selenium show promise for lung cancer prevention, based on positive secondary/subset analyses of three large-scale, randomized National Cancer Institute (NCI) cancer prevention trials. Future directions of lung cancer chemoprevention include the study of molecular markers of risk and drug activity, molecular targeting study, improved imaging techniques (e.g., molecular imaging) and new drug delivery systems.
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Review Comparative Study
Complications of retroperitoneal lymph node dissection in testicular cancer: primary and post-chemotherapy.
Retroperitoneal lymph node dissection (RPLND) is utilized in low-stage testis cancer as a primary diagnostic and therapeutic procedure. In the post-chemotherapy setting, it serves as an adjuvant procedure to resect residual tumor. Primary RPLND entails minimal resection of lymphatic tissue in the retroperitoneum; the complications are minor and insignificant. ⋯ Chylous ascites may occur, especially where resection of the inferior vena cava is necessary. Other complications occur to a lesser extent. A summary of all complications is presented and measures to avoid or manage them are depicted.
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The success of combination chemotherapy in treating advanced metastatic germ cell tumors has led to new challenges for the genitourinary oncologic surgeon in the peri-operative care of patients. Surgery remains an integral part of the management of patients with advanced germ cell tumors. Retroperitoneal node dissections following chemotherapy or radiation, or both, are technically more demanding and subject to higher rates of peri-operative complications. ⋯ Pulmonary toxicity and vascular (cardiac or peripheral) events are the two most immediately life-threatening complications that can occur in the peri-operative period. Due to the high incidence of subclinical pulmonary toxicity, one must consider all patients who have received bleomycin pre-operatively at risk to develop postoperative pulmonary problems. Pre-operative evaluation and judicious fluid management have been shown to reduce the risk of life-threatening respiratory complications in the postoperative period.