Aim:The tongue plays a major role in articulation. Speech outcome depends on the site of lesion, extent of resection, and flexibility of the remaining structures. The aim of this study is to evaluate the speech outcome measures such as sounds that are misarticulated and speech intelligibility and its connection to tumor site before and after surgery.Methodology:Totally, 24 (12 pre- and 12 post-operative patients) patients who had buccal and tongue cancer underwent speech intelligibility rating and articulation screening.Result:The results show that the speech outcome is worse in postoperative patients when compared to preoperative patients. The articulation errors produced by tongue cancer patients were more than the errors produced in buccal cancer patients. The type of reconstruction also affects the speech outcome.Conclusion:The perceptual analysis of oral cancer patients showed specific articulation issues and reduced intelligibility of speech in regards to site of lesion and type of reconstruction surgery. To reduce the speech errors, effective rehabilitation is recommended. A comprehensive speech evaluation and analysis of error patterns would help us in planning the rehabilitative measures of speech which is the most important factor in re-establishing interpersonal communication and well-being of the individual.
Pelvic actinomycosis is a rare entity that occurs almost exclusively in women, the presentation of which is usually non-specific and variable. Pelvic actinomycosis is almost always associated with the use of an intrauterine contraceptive device (IUD). Pelvic actinomycosis unrelated to IUD use is almost always associated with previous surgical procedures. The symptoms, clinical signs and radiological findings are usually non-specific, mimicking an ovarian malignancy. So an awareness of this rare condition and a proper diagnosis can avoid unnecessary surgeries because these cases can be treated with a prolonged course of antibiotics. We present a case of pelvic actinomycosis which masqueraded as an ovarian malignancy.
Background: Clear cell and mucinous types of epithelial ovarian cancers are relatively chemo resistant and have a poorer prognosis compared to other histologies. Aim of the study was to study the biochemical and histopathological response and surgical outcome of various histologies to standard platin based chemotherapy.Methods: All 42 cases of locally advanced carcinoma ovary who received several cycles of neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NACT) followed by, interval cytoreductive surgery (ICS) were included in this study. Serum CA125 levels before and after neoadjuvant chemotherapy, the ability to achieve optimal cytoreduction and the presence of residual tumour in the surgical specimen were the parameters measured. Continuous variables were compared by one-way ANOVA. Categorical variables were compared by the Pearson chi-square test. Significance was defined by p values less than 0.05. Survival analysis was done using Kaplan-Meier estimation.Results: There was a 95,84% reduction in serum CA125 levels for papillary serous carcinoma compared to clear cell and mucinous varieties, which had 81.2% and 78.5% reduction, respectively. More number of papillary serous tumours were able to achieve optimal cytoreduction (72%) compared to mucinous variety (25%). Residual tumour was present in 68% of serous papillary tumours compared to 87.5% in mucinous and 80% in clear cell histology.Conclusions: Our study concludes that mucinous and clear cell types of EOC are relatively chemo resistant compared to the serous subtype. We recommend more aggressive surgery especially for mucinous tumours. In the case of ovarian cancer, we observed that the mucinous and clear cell types of EOC are relatively chemoresistant compared to the serous subtype. From the results, we recommend the more aggressive strategy of surgery as a preliminary choice of treatment especially for mucinous tumours rather than chemotherapy in patients with EOC.
Abdominopelvic tuberculosis often poses a diagnostic challenge due to its bizarre clinical features and inconclusive imaging features. Most such patients were categorized under advanced ovarian cancer and undergo radical cytoreductive surgery with its associated morbidity, which would otherwise resolve spontaneously with medical management. This is a retrospective study of ten patients referred to the Department of Surgical Oncology between November 2015 to October 2018 in a tertiary care centre at south Tamil Nadu, India as advanced ovarian cancer and later diagnosed to have tuberculosis.In 10 patients, the mean age was 34 years; mean CA125 was 496.6 IU/ml. abdominal pain and distension, loss of weight were seen in 70% of cases, respectively.Only one patient had a prior history of tuberculosis. The imaging findings were complex adnexal mass in 9 patients (90%), ascites in 6 patients (60%) and omental stranding in 6 patients (60%). Abdominal paracentesis was done in 6 patients (60%) and all had lymphocyte rich effusion. The diagnosis is established by laparotomy and biopsy in seven patients (70%), diagnostic laparoscopy in two patients (20%) and image-guided trucut biopsy in one patient (10%) with histopathology revealing caseating granulomas. With our patients' experience, a high index of suspicion is always needed whenever we encounter young women presenting with ascites, adnexal mass and elevated serum CA125 even when the routine investigations for tuberculosis reveal negative findings. The biopsy is the gold standard for establishing the diagnosis and to commence therapy.
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