Background: The impact of diabetes and cardiovascular comorbidity on laparoscopic cholecystectomy has been long debated, evaluating them as risk factors for conversion to an open procedure especially in patients with acute cholecystitis: an "early" procedure, as suggested by 2013 Tokyo guidelines, has been compared to a "very delayed" one in patients under anticoagulant/antiplatelet therapy or treated for diabetes and referred by medical wards to surgery after the acute period.
Methods: We selected 240 patients operated for acute cholecystitis by laparoscopy over the last 4 years at St. Orsola University Hospital-Bologna and Umberto I University Hospital-Rome, comparing 98 diabetic/cardiovascular patients versus 142 subjects as control group: the selection was based on operative timing, "early" (73 patients treated within 3 days) and "very delayed" (167 patients operated after 6 weeks).
A 39-year-old white man with a history of right renal pelvic stones treated 1 year before by extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy, but with no history of major surgery, alcoholism, pancreatitis, hyperparathyroidism or trauma, was admitted, suffering from an abdominal mass. Abdominal and pelvic computed tomography revealed an enlarged pancreatic head (9 cm in transverse diameter) with, inside it, a heterogeneous, cyst-like structure, measuring 7 cm in diameter. It was suspected that this lesion was a cystic neoplasm and the patient underwent a proximal pancreaticoduodenectomy and a cholecystectomy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhimosis, i.e. congenital or acquired preputial stenosis, is one of the most frequent problems encountered in surgery departments.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPopliteal artery aneurysm is not a rare event and is the most common type of peripheral arterial aneurysm. The Authors report on their experience with two cases. One patient had a giant popliteal aneurysm and was treated with a dacron patch, while the other had a smaller one and was treated with an inverse saphenous vein bypass.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe case history of a 23 year old man with a large hibernoma of the cervical region is reported. Th tumour showed all the clinical and pathologic characteristic of these rare benign neoplasms. A review of the most recent literature supports the Authors' conclusion that local excision is curative.
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