1,245 research outputs found

    Successful Late Management of Esophageal Perforation with T-Tube Drainage

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    The late management of spontaneous esophageal perforation is the most challenging problem for the surgeon. In this paper, we present a case in whom a spontaneous esophageal perforation was successfully treated by T-tube drainage after unsuccessful conservative treatment. The patient, a 68-year-old male, was admitted to the hospital with sudden upper abdominal pain. After 2 days, esophageal perforation was diagnosed, and conservative management was begun. Thereafter, the subcutaneous emphysema disappeared, and the patient's temperature decreased. However, on day 13, the patient's temperature spiked above 38°C, and computed tomography showed a mediastinal abscess. An emergency left thoracotomy with laparotomy was performed. Since a 2-cm longitudinal perforation with severe inflammatory reactions was observed, the T-tube drainage method was performed. The patient was discharged without postoperative complications and has not experienced any gastrointestinal symptoms, such as gastroesophageal reflux or dysphagia. In conclusion, the T-tube drainage method appears to be a simple and effective method for the late management of esophageal perforation with severe inflammatory reaction

    Prognostic factors in patients with submucosal carcinoma of the oesophagus

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    To clarify the prognostic factors in patients with submucosal carcinoma of the oesophagus, we examined the results of surgical treatment for 78 cases over the last decade. The clinicopathological factors including age, sex, location of the tumour, length of the tumour, histological differentiation, subclassification of depth, lymphatic or blood vessel invasion, intramural metastasis and lymph node metastasis were all analysed. Then the correlation between these factors and prognosis was investigated. As a result, significant differences were observed in the survival rates between the groups regarding lymphatic vessel invasion (P = 0.0003), intramural metastasis (P = 0.0051) and lymph node metastasis (P = 0.0026). According to a multivariate analysis, intramural metastasis (P = 0.0038, relative risk 9.17), vessel invasion (P = 0.0033, relative risk 6.25) and lymph node metastasis (P = 0.0187, relative risk 3.62) were found to be independent prognostic factors. The prognosis of the patients with at least one of these factors was significantly poorer than that without. The five-year survival rate of the patients without these factors was as good as that with mucosal carcinoma of the oesophagus. Based on our findings, vessel invasion, intramural metastasis and lymph node metastasis are thus considered to be significant prognostic factors in patients with submucosal carcinoma of the oesophagus. © 2000 Cancer Research Campaig

    p53 expression in squamous dysplasia associated with carcinoma of the oesophagus: evidence for field carcinogenesis

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    Squamous epithelial dysplasia is often observed multifocally in the cancerous oesophagus and is presumably considered to be a pre-cancerous lesion. A mutation of the p53 tumour suppressor gene is commonly identified in oesophageal cancer and dysplasia. p53 mutations can be anticipated immunohistochemically. In order to confirm the biological and clinical significance of p53 expressions in oesophageal field carcinogenesis, immunostaining for p53 in cancerous and multifocal precancerous lesions from resected human oesophagus was systematically investigated, while paying special attention to the contiguity of these lesions. Lesions expressing p53 were detected in 46.5% (20 of 43 lesions) of the invasive carcinoma, and in 51.0% (46 of 90 lesions) of the carcinoma in situ, and in 51.4% (92 of 179 lesions) of the dysplasia. Next, the p53 expression in dysplasia was compared with that in carcinoma for the same case. 37 of 39 (94.8%) dysplasias contiguous to p53-positive carcinomas also expressed p53 (P < 0.0001). On the other hand, the isolated dysplasias without contiguity to p53-positive carcinomas, only expressed p53 protein in 44.0% (11 of 25 lesions). No significant correlations were found between the p53 staining and either the clinicopathological features or prognosis. Discordant p53 alterations, such as those seen in cancerous and isolated precancerous lesions, may thus demonstrate further evidence for a multicentric or field carcinogenesis of the human oesophagus. © 2000 Cancer Research Campaig

    Short-range order and precipitation in Fe-rich Fe-Cr alloys: Atomistic off-lattice Monte Carlo simulations

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    Short-range order (SRO) in Fe-rich Fe-Cr alloys is investigated by means of atomistic off-lattice Monte Carlo simulations in the semi-grand canonical ensemble using classical interatomic potentials. The SRO parameter defined by Cowley [Phys. Rev. B 77, 669 (1950)] is used to quantify the degree of ordering. In agreement with experiments a strong ordering tendency in the Cr distribution at low Cr concentrations (~< 5%) is observed, as manifested in negative values of the SRO parameters. For intermediate Cr concentrations (5% ~< c_Cr ~< 15%) the SRO parameter for the alpha-phase goes through a minimum, but at the solubility limit the alpha-phase still displays a rather strong SRO. In thermodynamic equilibrium for concentrations within the two-phase region the SRO parameter measured over the entire sample therefore comprises the contributions from both the alpha and alpha-prime phases. If both of these contributions are taken into account, it is possible to quantitatively reproduce the experimental results and interpret their physical implications. It is thereby shown that the inversion of the SRO observed experimentally is due to the formation of stable (supercritical) alpha-prime precipitates. It is not related to the loss of SRO in the alpha-phase or to the presence of unstable (subcritical) Cr precipitates in the alpha-phase.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figure
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