J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg
April 1986
Over a period of 12 1/2 years, 476 patients underwent thoracotomy for lung cancer at two affiliated hospitals. Hospital mortality for all patients was 5.25% and for those undergoing pulmonary resection, 5.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe reviewed survival of patients with clinically localized small cell carcinoma of the lung treated by surgical resection, combination chemotherapy, and prophylactic cranial irradiation. Long-term survival was defined as continuing complete remission 30 months after the start of treatment. Initial TNM staging determined the course of treatment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn patients treated nonsurgically for "limited" small cell carcinoma of the lung, the most frequent site of relapse is within the chest. We have treated patients with clinical Stage III M0 disease (T3 and/or N2, M0) by two cycles of chemotherapy, surgical resection of the primary site and mediastinal nodes, and continued chemotherapy thereafter. Since May, 1979, the regimen has consisted of cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine, and etoposide on a 3 week cycle.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTen patients with localized small cell carcinoma of the lung (clinical stages I and II) were treated by surgical resection more than 2 years ago; operation was followed by a course of intensive combination chemotherapy. Relapse of the disease has occurred in the central nervous system in 1 patient. One patient died of a surgical complication, and another died more than 4 years later of an unrelated malignancy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Thorac Cardiovasc Surg
January 1982
Surgical resection offers distinct theoretical advantages as the "local" modality in treatment of Stage I and II small cell carcinoma of the lung. We have treated 10 such patients by initial resection since 1975; all survivors but one received adjuvant chemotherapy for the full course thereafter. One patient died of a pulmonary embolus; the other nine remain without evidence of disease from 7 to 69 months after resection.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Thorac Cardiovasc Surg
February 1979
Surgical resection has failed notably as definitive treatment for small cell carcinoma of the lung. Newer treatment programs combining intensive chemotherapy with radiation therapy achieve a significant response in about 85 percent of cases, with about 50 percent of patients showing clinically complete remission. Long-term survival without recurrence has been the outcome in a small minority of cases.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWith the discovery and routine use of antibiotics, a virtually new disease--primary acquired hypogammaglobulinemia--was recognized. More precise clinical, genetic, and laboratory endeavor has proved, in fact, that it is really one of a whole host of individual disease entities, all with the common feature of inadequate production and marshalling of gamma globulin to combat infection. Although the condition has been recognized in children's medicine for two decades, the survival of these early victims into adolescence and adulthood is now bringing them to the attention of surgeons as candidates for drainage or resection of suppurative disease of the lung, air tubes, and pleura.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFExperience with 23 patients with pericarditis and pericardial effusion is discussed. The methods of drainage with their relative merits are mentioned, as are the etiology of pericarditis, signs and symptoms of the disease as well as various techniques for establishing the diagnosis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAspiration disease, a term used to define both an acute and chronic form of a disease entity, is described. Etiological factors, pathophysiology and therapy are discussed with emphasis on aspiration of gastric juice. A brief mention of a small clinical experience is included.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis is a report of one patient with the unusual complication of ischemic colitis in a segment of interposed right colon which was used for esophageal substitution. The presentation was unusual in that the patient had three episodes of massive lower gastrointestinal bleeding. The diagnosis was established by selective angiography and a barium contrast study.
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