We present an overview of the fast development of less invasive techniques in intrarenal surgery all based on percutaneous nephrostomy. Life-long urinary diversion with nephrostomy is often necessary in patients with malignant disease and such patients have more postnephrostomy complications than patients with kidney stones and their survival is short. In a follow-up of 246 patients with 275 nephrostomies performed consecutively over two years, mean survival after urinary diversion was only 7.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe aim of this study was to compare three imaging strategies for the diagnosis of local recurrence of rectal cancer: (a) MR imaging; (b) MR imaging after administration of enteral superparamagnetic particles (Ferristene); and (c) contrast-enhanced CT. Seventeen patients with previous surgery for rectal cancer were examined, 12 patients with local tumour recurrence in the pelvis and 5 patients with postoperative changes. Pelvic multi-coil MR imaging before and after oral administration of superparamagnetic contrast medium [Abdoscan (Ferristene USAN), Nycomed-Amersham, Lidingö, Sweden] as well as abdominal and pelvic CT was performed in all patients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Biliary papillomatosis is rare and often fatal. Liver resection or transplantation is recommended but may be impossible due to tumor or patient factors; furthermore, it appears to the authors of this study that no follow-up results after transplantation have been reported in previous studies.
Methods: Bilobar but limited biliary papillomatosis in a man age 54 years was mapped by cholangiopancreatography, cholecystectomy, and operative cholangioscopy.
Purpose: To compare advanced imaging techniques in the diagnosis of recurrent rectal cancer.
Material And Methods: Twenty-five consecutive patients with either suspected or verified recurrence were examined by CT (n = 25), MR with phased-array capabilities (n = 24) and CEA scintigraphy (n = 16). Three experienced radiologists (who were blinded to results obtained at surgery and histopathology) independently evaluated the films, one observer for each modality.
The technique for ethanol injection of liver tumors was modified in order to obtain less reflux with a better intratumoral distribution of ethanol, leading to more extensive necrosis and to a reduction of pain. The needle was stopped just before its entrance into the tumor and ethanol was injected while the needle was advanced a little beyond the distant border of the tumor. Pain and change in echogenicity during and immediately after each injection were evaluated in 11 patients with 38 malignant lesions who received 90 injections with the new or 46 with the conventional technique.
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