Richard H. Overholt was born at the beginning of the twentieth century when thoracic surgery hardly existed. During the first 20 years of his life progress in the field was slow.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThirty patients with Stage III non-small cell lung cancer were entered on a trial to evaluate the feasibility of combined radiation and concomitant 5-fluorouracil infusion. Patients had received prior debulking surgery (nine), induction chemotherapy (16), or no therapy (five). Radiation employed standard fractionation (180-200 rad/day) administered to a median cumulative dose of 5500 rad (range, 4500-6200 rad).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe reviewed 100 operations performed on 95 consecutive patients with stage II (n = 7) and stage III (n = 88) primary lung cancer. The five-year survival of patients with N1 involvement was 58% and with N2 disease was 21%. Of 13 patients with Pancoast or chest wall involvement, 58% survived five years.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThree cases of benign lesions which mimicked malignant tumors of the esophagus are described. In all three cases, two inflammatory pseudotumors and one case of diffuse leiomyomatosis, the clinical presentations, radiologic features, and gross pathologic findings led to the mistaken diagnosis of carcinoma at thoracotomy. The benign nature of the processes was recognizable only on microscopic examination.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnn Thorac Surg
January 1987
Long-term survival after treatment of Pancoast tumors has been limited in most series to those patients without positive lymph nodes or residual tumor. In our series of 18 consecutive patients treated with preoperative irradiation and resection, 14 underwent supplemental postoperative radiotherapy because of positive lymph nodes, tumor at the resection margin, or both. No hospital deaths occurred.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFExtrathoracic esophagectomy for carcinoma is an acceptable substitute for transthoracic resection if it can be shown to have comparable or superior safety and no adverse effect on long-term survival. To test this hypothesis, we employed extrathoracic esophagectomy in 30 consecutive patients with carcinoma of the esophagus from January, 1978, to July, 1984. During this period, 65 comparable patients underwent transthoracic resection through a left thoracotomy for lower esophageal lesions or a right thoracotomy and laparotomy for upper thoracic lesions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe reviewed our concurrent experience with percutaneous insertion versus surgical placement of the intraaortic balloon pump over a two-year period both to compare morbidity and to provide guidelines for the choice of method in particular patient groups and clinical settings. The effects on morbidity of sex, age, emergency placement, coexisting peripheral vascular disease, and duration of counterpulsation were determined. Sex was a highly significant factor, with low complication rates (3/29 or 10.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAtherosclerotic cardiovascular disease is the major cause of death in insulin-dependent diabetics of juvenile onset (JODM). This report summarizes our experience in coronary artery bypass surgery performed between 1971 and 1980 on 13 JODM patients. Preoperatively, 12 of 13 patients had NYHA class IV symptoms with 78% of patients having either left main or multivessel coronary artery disease.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDuring the past 2.5 years, 13 patients underwent esophagectomy for carcinoma of the esophagus without the use of a thoracotomy. During the same period, 81 operations on the esophagus or cardia were performed, 73 of which were esophagogastrectomies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA new technique for reconstruction of the chest wall providing immediate chest wall stability was employed in six patients who required extensive chest wall resection for a variety of neoplasms. Despite preoperative impairment of pulmonary function, early extubation was possible in all patients. Pulmonary function was well preserved on follow-up examination.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Thorac Cardiovasc Surg
October 1978
Mucoepidermoid carcinomas of the tracheobronchial tree are extremely uncommon and, as a result, opinions regarding their natural history are conflicting. In an effort to determine whether the tumors are aggressive or relatively benign, we have collected seven well-documented, previously unreported cases from among 4,250 primary pulmonary carcinomas and 116 bronchial adenomas. The two tracheal and five endobronchial lesions presented here include one high-grade and six low-grade tumors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBetween July 1968 and December 1974, 53 patients with lung cancer were planned for preoperative irradiation and surgery. All patients were considered clinically marginally resectable because of advanced local disease, 4 Stage II patients, with limited pulmonary reserve and 49 Stage III patients. Most patients received 3000 to 4000 rad followed in two weeks by thoracotomy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA case of intraoperative cardiac tamponade manifested during closure of a median sternotomy is presented. We postulate that cardiac tamponade was caused by acute dilatation of the cardiac chambers as a result of intraoartic balloon pumping in a patient with aortic and mitral regurgitation. It has been shown experimentally that acute rises in ventricular end-diastolic pressure result in increased intrapericardial pressure and that if a certain point on the pericardial pressure-volume curve is reached, cardiac tamponade will occur.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBetween April, 1932, and July, 1974, 3,808 patients with primary lung cancer were studied and 1,848 underwent resection. Among untreated patients, 95% were dead with a year. Unresected cancer of the lung is so lethal that efforts to streamline surgical management should not be neglected.
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