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1/10. Postoperative hyponatremia in a patient with ACTH-producing Merkel cell carcinoma.

    Merkel cell carcinoma is characterized by specific neuroendocrine features and the expression of several neuropeptides. We report a case of Merkel cell carcinoma with post-surgical hyponatremia in an 85-year-old Japanese woman. A tumor on the left cheek histopathologically showed the characteristics of Merkel cell carcinoma together with bowen's disease. Although an increased level of ACTH was found both in the tumor and in the peripheral blood, the postoperative hyponatremia in our patient seems more likely to have been caused by the stress of the operation and indapamide, considering that the ACTH level in the tumor was much lower than those in other ectopic ACTH-producing tumors in previous reports.
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2/10. Transganglionic gracile response following limb amputation in man.

    Gracile neuroaxonal dystrophy (nad) is an distinctive morphological alteration of central projecting axon terminals of dorsal root ganglion neurons. Experimentally, lower limb amputation has been shown to accelerate the formation of gracile nad, suggesting that the transganglionic response to peripheral axotomy may play a role in its development. To determine if a similar response occurs in the human sensory nervous system following peripheral nerve injury, we have performed postmortem histopathological examinations of the dorsal column nuclei of three patients (aged 15, 55, and 77 years old); all of whom had undergone accidental or therapeutic unilateral limb amputation (1 year, 38 years, and 1 year 8 months prior to death, respectively). In a 15-year-old man who underwent therapeutic leg amputation, the gracile nuclei on the transected side revealed reactive gliosis and many small axonal spheroids. The spheroids and fine neurites were immunolabelled with antibodies for growth-associated protein-43, ubiquitin and neuropeptide y (NPY). Neither routine histological nor immunohistochemical methods demonstrated comparable changes in the contralateral gracile nucleus. In a 77-year-old man who underwent leg amputation, the gracile nucleus on the amputated side was gliotic and showed several NPY and ubiquitin-immunoreactive spheroids, which were not seen in the contralateral non-transected side. A 55-year-old man with a history of accidental arm amputation showed well-developed nad in the cuneate nucleus only on the transected side. This study clearly demonstrates the occurrence of transganglionic response to limb amputation in human dorsal column nuclei. The extent of the regenerative and/or degenerative responses may vary depending on the age of the patient and the time interval following the peripheral axotomy.
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3/10. somatostatin: a new therapeutic option for the treatment of chylothorax.

    BACKGROUND: The standard treatment of chylothorax in pediatric intensive care today includes conservative therapy with fat-free nutrition, total parenteral nutrition and, if this is not successful, operative treatment (pleurodesis, ligation of the duct, pleuroperitoneal shunt). PATIENTS: We describe four patients who were not in a suitable condition for operative treatment and who were treated with continuous infusion of somatostatin. RESULTS: In three patients, chylothorax ceased with the continuous somatostatin infusion without side effects. One patient was treated without success. CONCLUSIONS: somatostatin is a therapeutic option for treatment of chylothorax and could reduce surgical intervention and hospitalization time, as well as allow earlier enteral feeding.
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4/10. Complex tumors of the glomus jugulare: criteria, treatment, and outcome.

    OBJECT: Tumors of the glomus jugulare are benign, slow-growing paragangliomas. Their natural history, surgical treatment, and outcome have been well addressed in the recent literature; however, there remains a subgroup of complex tumors--multiple, giant, malignant, neuropeptide-secreting lesions, and those treated previously by an intervention with an adverse outcome--that is high risk, presents surgical challenges, and is associated with treatment controversy. In this article the authors report on a series of patients with complex glomus jugulare tumors and focus on treatment decisions, avoidance of complications, surgical refinements, and patient outcomes. methods: In this retrospective study, the patient population was composed of 11 male and 32 female patients (mean age 47 years) with complex tumors of the glomus jugulare who were treated by the senior author within the past 20 years. These include 38 patients with giant tumors, 11 with multiple paragangliomas (seven bilateral and four ipsilateral), two with tumors that hypersecreted catecholamine, and one with a malignant tumor. Six patients had associated lesions: one dural arteriovenous malformation, one carotid artery (CA) aneurysm, two adrenal tumors, and two other cranial tumors. All but one patient presented with neurological deficits. Cranial nerve deficits, particularly those associated with the lower cranial nerves, were the prominent feature. Twenty-eight patients underwent resection in an attempt at total removal, and gross-total resection was achieved in 24 patients. Particularly challenging were cases in which the patient had undergone prior embolization or CA occlusion, after which new feeding vessels from the internal CA and vertebrobasilar artery circulation developed. The surgical technique was tailored to each patient and each tumor. It was modified to preserve facial nerve function, particularly in patients with bilateral tumors. Intrabulbar dissection was performed to increase the likelihood that the lower cranial nerves would be preserved. Each tumor was isolated to improve its resectability and prevent blood loss. No operative mortality occurred. In one patient hemiplegia developed postoperatively due to CA thrombosis, but the patient recovered after an endovascular injection of urokinase. In four patients a cerebrospinal fluid leak was treated through spinal drainage, and in five patients infection developed in the external ear canal. Two of these infections progressed to osteomyelitis of the temporal bone. There were two recurrences, one in a patient with a malignant tumor who eventually died of the disease. CONCLUSIONS: Despite the challenges encountered in treating complex glomus jugulare tumors, resection is indicated and successful. Multiple tumors mandate a treatment plan that addresses the risk of bilateral cranial nerve deficits. The intrabulbar dissection technique can be used with any tumor, as long as the tumor itself has not penetrated the wall of the jugular bulb or infiltrated the cranial nerves. Tumors that hypersecrete catecholamine require perioperative management and malignant tumors carry a poor prognosis.
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5/10. Use of LeVeen pleuroperitoneal shunt for refractory high-volume chylothorax.

    We present a case of intractable high-volume (> 2L/d) chylothorax after transhiatal esophagectomy treated successfully with the simultaneous insertion of both Denver (Denver Biomedical, Golden, CO) and LeVeen (Becton-Dickinson, Rutherford, NJ) pleuroperitoneal shunts. The patient initially had chemoradiotherapy for a T4N1 squamous cell carcinoma of the thoracic esophagus. Re-staging showed a dramatic shrinkage of tumor, and a transhiatal esophagectomy was performed. Sequential bilateral thoracotomies were performed on postoperative days 19 and 26 for attempted control of high-volume chylothorax, but these were unsuccessful. Subsequent pleuroperitoneal shunt insertion was used, which immediately controlled the effusion. A shunt study was performed shortly after hospital discharge, which showed an occluded Denver shunt and a patent LeVeen shunt. The patient succumbed to metastatic carcinoma 18 months after discharge, but no pleural effusion had recurred.
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6/10. Successful treatment of postoperative chylothorax using an external pleuroperitoneal shunt.

    We report 3 patients with chylothorax who were successfully managed as outpatients using external pleuroperitoneal shunts. This external shunt has the advantage over subcutaneously placed shunts of pumping large volumes of fluid with each compression of the pumping chamber, of not causing the discomfort associated with pumping a subcutaneous chamber, of not becoming difficult to find in the subcutaneous space, and of being constructed of larger components which do not kink or become easily clogged with fibrinous debris.
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7/10. Pleuroperitoneal shunt for pneumonectomy cavity malignant effusion.

    Delayed mediastinal shift toward the remaining lung is an unusual cause of postpneumonectomy dyspnea. We report a patient who developed severe dyspnea when a malignant effusion occurred in the pneumonectomy cavity and caused a contralateral mediastinal shift. Repeated thoracentesis was needed until insertion of a pleuroperitoneal shunt effected palliation.
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8/10. Pleuroperitoneal effusion without ascites.

    A recurrent unilateral pleural effusion developed without obvious cause in two patients with cirrhosis of the liver. By the demonstration of the rapid passage of a radiolabelled colloid from abdomen to thorax, these effusions were proved to be secondary to clinically undetectable peritoneal effusions. A diaphragmatic tear, which had occurred during a previous splenectomy and which was apparent only at autopsy, was the cause of peritoneopleural communication in one patient. Previous surgery could also have been responsible for the pleural effusion in the other patient.
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9/10. Traumatic rupture of the pericardium.

    Patients with traumatic rupture of the pericardium rarely survive to reach a hospital. Ten cases from the maryland Institute for emergency medical services Systems and 132 previously published cases are reviewed. Patients were usually men who were victims of violent thoracic trauma. The median age was 40 years. Half of the patients had left pleuropericardial tears; tears of the diaphragmatic pericardium, right pleuropericardium, and superior mediastinal pericardium were less frequent. Associated injuries of the heart or left hemidiaphragm were common. Pericardial rupture was usually discovered during surgical exploration for other indications, but physical or radiographic signs were occasionally present. Repair is indicated for most pericardial tears to prevent herniation of the heart or abdominal viscera.
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ranking = 2
keywords = europe
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10/10. Digital nerve compression by hyperplastic pacinian corpuscles. A case report and immunohistochemical study.

    A 68-year-old lady developed digital pain within days of the excision of a palmar ganglion. This was found to be due to a mass of hyperplastic pacinian corpuscles compressing the digital nerve. immunohistochemistry was carried out on the resected corpuscles using antisera to a range of neuropeptides. Possible mechanisms of hyperplasia are discussed.
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