Publications by authors named "Goetzinger P"

Background: Delayed gastric emptying (DGE) is of considerable concern in patients undergoing pylorus-preserving pancreaticoduodenectomy (PPPD). Prolonged hospital stay, increased cost, and decreased quality of life add on to interventions needed to treat DGE. This study was conducted to determine if performing duodenojejunostomy via the antecolic rather than the retrocolic route improved incidence of DGE.

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Background: About 30% of patients with pancreatic cancer suffer from locally advanced nonmetastatic carcinoma at the time of diagnosis. We conducted a prospective phase II clinical trial using neoadjuvant chemotherapy, consisting of gemcitabine and docetaxel, to assess the rate of complete radical resection and overall survival.

Methods: Gemcitabine (900 mg/m2) and docetaxel (35 mg/m2) were given on days 1, 8, and 15 of a 28-day cycle.

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Purpose: To compare the diagnostic performance (detection, local staging) of multiphasic 64-detector row computed tomography (CT) with that of gadobenate dimeglumine-enhanced 3.0-T magnetic resonance (MR) imaging in patients suspected of having pancreatic cancer.

Materials And Methods: The institutional review board approved this prospective study, and all patients provided written informed consent.

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Purpose: The object of this study was to investigate the bridging treatment of enteric fistulae by vacuum-assisted closure (VAC) therapy in patients with open abdomen.

Methods: We retrospectively analyzed patients who have been treated between 1 January 2007 and 31 December 2008 at the intensive care unit of the Department of General Surgery, Medical University Vienna. Control of the fistula was established by VAC therapy to bridge the patients to the time of the fistula resection.

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Background: Neoadjuvant chemotherapy can facilitate pancreatic resection in patients with initially unresectable pancreatic cancer (PC). We report the results of a phase II trial of gemcitabine-oxaliplatin neoadjuvant chemotherapy for patients with locally advanced, nonmetastatic PC.

Methods: A prospective, phase II clinical trial using neoadjuvant chemotherapy, consisting of gemcitabine (900 mg/m(2)) and oxaliplatin (60 mg/m(2)) given as intravenous infusion once a week at day 1 of each treatment cycle (NeoGemOx protocol).

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The hepatic artery buffer response, which is lost during endotoxemia, plays a central role in the autoregulation of liver perfusion. A temporarily decreased synthesis of nitric oxide during early endotoxemia might be responsible for this dysfunction; hence exogenous administration of nitric oxide could reestablish the autoregulation of hepatic blood flow and help prevent hepatic damage later in septic shock. Fifteen pigs were treated with lipopolysaccharide +/- the nitric oxide donor nitroprusside-sodium via the portal vein.

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Technical advances of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), including ultrahigh-field magnetic resonance at 3.0 T, parallel imaging techniques, and multichannel receive coils of the abdomen, have promoted MRI of the pancreas. For adenocarcinoma, which is the most common malignant pancreatic tumor, helical CT has been most often used for detection and staging, but it has limitations in the detection of small cancers 2 cm in diameter or less (sensitivity, 63%).

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Despite extensive efforts in the fields of donor selection and management, standardisation of organ retrieval procedures, storage solutions, and novel immunosuppressive protocols, the rates of delayed graft function (DGF) after renal transplantation have been stagnating between 30% and 50%. As DGF exerts negative influences on acute rejection episodes and long-term organ function, the early phase of transplantation immediately following reperfusion deserves special interest. Several studies on machine-controlled reperfusion showed promising results in various organs, in experimental and clinical settings.

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Objective: To investigate whether the administration of different glutamine-containing dipeptides, glycyl-l-glutamine (GLY-GLN) and l-alanyl-l-glutamine, has a differing impact on perioperative immunomodulation.

Summary Background Data: Surgery leads to transitory immunosuppression, which is associated with decreased plasma glutamine (GLN) levels and increased susceptibility to infection and sepsis. A useful tool to detect immunocompetence is the ex vivo lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-stimulated tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha) secretion in whole blood.

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Pancreatoduodenectomy (PD) has become a routine procedure. Recent series report perioperative mortality rates of 5% or less, moderate morbidity, and even improved long-term survival. Nevertheless, being one of the most complex abdominal operations, a certain number of surgical procedures (i.

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L-Glutamine is the most abundant free amino acid of the human body and is essential for the culture of many cell types. Clinically, reduction of glutamine by administration of glutaminase or the use of glutamine analogs is a common therapy for patients with acute lymphocytic leukemia. In the current study, we investigated the influence of glutamine concentrations on the human myelomonocytic cell line U937.

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To detect the reasons for a massive decrease in the annual number of organ donors and as a means of evaluating the effectiveness of our information programme, a questionnaire was designed and sent to all intensive care units (ICUs) in our catchment area. We wished to obtain information about medical, organizational and capacity problems and negative occurrences that had happend during past retrievals. Although 60% of the answers we reiceved (87% feedback rate) mentioned the additional workload involved in treating an organ donor (and 88% had serious problems because of the shortage of nurses), less than 16% remembered a "lost" donor because of capacity problems.

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Primary non-function (PNF) of renal allografts has been attributed to various risk factors, among them immunological ones, as well as unfavourable preservation conditions. To investigate the impact of these risk factory on the occurrence of PNF, 1335 consecutive kidney transplants performed at a single centre over a 10-year period were analysed. All patients received immunosuppression based on cyclosporine.

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The purpose of this study was to investigate the impact of prenephrectomy donor tissue typing on tissue typing quality and transplantation outcome in human kidney transplantation. We report on 680 consecutive kidney transplantations performed at the Vienna Transplantation Center from 1986 to June 1991. In 343 of them, HLA typing was performed using donor lymph node cells obtained in a small surgical procedure several hours before organ retrieval.

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Two hundred and eight orthotopic liver transplantations (OLT) were performed in 191 patients at the I Department of Surgery, University of Vienna from 1982-1990. The most frequent indications were hepatocellular carcinoma, alcoholic cirrhosis, posthepatic cirrhosis, primary biliary cirrhosis, and fulminant hepatic failure. Patients with malignancy constituted 33.

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