4 research outputs found
Radioguided occult colonic lesion identification (ROCLI) during open and laparoscopic surgery
AIMS AND BACKGROUND: Intraoperative localization, during open and laparoscopic surgery, of small, nonpalpable colonic lesions located at peculiar sites or with concurrent inflammatory bowel alterations (diverticulosis, perivisceritis) is often difficult. The aim of our work was to assess the validity of radioguided identification after preoperative labeling. METHODS AND STUDY DESIGN: Patients who were candidates for colon surgery for occult lesions that, because of their size and location, were assumed to be difficult to detect, underwent colonoscopy 1 to 2.5 hours before surgery. A small dose of labeled albumin macroaggregates was injected with a sclerotherapy needle into the subserosa underneath the lesion. Immediately following the injection the lesion was identified with a transcutaneously placed gamma detecting probe. Intraoperative tracer detection was performed either during open surgery or by means of a laparoscopic probe (detection time 3-5 mins). The position of the lesion was marked with a suture or with a clip. Surgery was performed according to the type of lesion to be treated. RESULTS: In our initial clinical experience 15 colon lesions were preoperatively marked in 14 patients and were subsequently detected during surgery (four under laparoscopy) with a gamma detecting probe. This technique allows highly accurate, fast, and inexpensive surgical localization of lesions without irradiation and without complications. CONCLUSION: Our experience shows that preoperative endoscopic marking of nonpalpable colon lesions with 99mTc-labeled albumin macroaggregates followed by intraoperative detection with a gamma probe is a useful clinical method that is highly accurate and without complications
Pre-filled normal saline syringes to reduce totally implantable venous access device-associated bloodstream infection: a single institution pilot study.
Abstract
Flushing totally implantable venous access devices (TIVADs) with manually filled saline syringes may increase contamination and catheter-related bloodstream infection (CRBSI). We used a retrospective cohort study to assess the impact of changing from manually filled syringes to manufactured pre-filled syringes on the frequency of CRBSI in 718 TIVADs. Manually filled syringes were used in 269 patients and pre-filled syringes in 449. The CRBSI rate was 2.7% in the pre-filled syringe group and 6.3% in the manually filled syringe group (P = 0.016). Sex, tumour type and stage, access site and access body side were not independent risk factors for CRBSI.
Copyright \ua9 2013 The Healthcare Infection Society. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved
Radioguided lymph node biopsy of a chemoresistant lymph node detected on interim FDG PET-CT in Hodgkin lymphoma
A 32-year-old male patient was diagnosed with nodular lymphocyte-predominant Hodgkin lymphoma. Staging FDG PET-CT detected a large right axillary lymph node conglomerate and splenic manifestation. Interim PET-CT following two cycles of ABVD chemotherapy revealed good metabolic response with the exception of a single axillary lymph node. A second "interim" PET-CT after two further cycles showed a similar result. A biopsy of the metabolically active non-palpable lymph node was performed using radioguided occult lesion localization (ROLL) with ultrasound guidance. The lymph node was successfully removed by minimally invasive surgery. Histological evaluation of the lymph node revealed a T cell-rich diffuse large B cell lymphoma. Based on this finding, a more aggressive treatment regimen followed by high dose chemotherapy with autologous stem cell rescue was adopted. To our knowledge, this is the first report of a lymphoma case in which the ROLL method was used in the radioguided biopsy of a chemoresistant lymph node detected by interim FDG PET-CT