Background Lymphatic drainage in the head and neck region is known to be particularly complex. This study explores the value of sentinel node biopsy for melanoma in the head and neck region. Methods Thirty consecutive patients with clinically localized cutaneous melanoma in the head and neck region were included. Sentinel node biopsy was performed with blue dye and a gamma probe after preoperative lymphoscintigraphy. Average follow‐up was 23 months (range, 1–48). Results In 27 of 30 patients, a sentinel node was identified (90%). Only 53% of sentinel nodes were both blue and radioactive. A sentinel node was tumor‐positive in 8 patients. The sentinel node was false‐negative in two cases. Sensitivity of the procedure was 80% (8 of 10). Conclusions Sentinel node biopsy in the head and neck region is a technically demanding procedure. Although it may help determine whether a neck dissection is necessary in certain patients, further investigation is required before this technique can be recommended for the standard management of cutaneous head and neck melanoma. © 2000 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Head Neck 22: 27–33, 2000.
Hepatic osteodystrophy is a complication of chronic liver disease and bone mass is known to decline further in the first year after liver transplantation. The present study focused on bone mineral density (BMD) between 1 and 15 years after liver transplantation under a prednisolone- and azathioprine-based immunosuppressive regimen. Three groups of adult patients were studied: group 1, 45 patients with a follow-up of 5-9 years after transplantation, had BMD measurements done at 1, 2 and 5 years after transplantation; group 2, 17 patients with a follow-up of 10-14 years, had BMD measurements done at 5 and 10 years; group 3, 4 patients with a follow-up of more than 15 years, had BMD measurements done at 10 and 15 years. BMD of lumbar spine (L1-L4) and proximal femur was measured using dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry, and at the same time radiographs of the spine and hips were made. Spinal BMD increased significantly, during the second post-transplant year; subsequently no significant changes were seen. Proximal femur BMD decreased slightly, but significantly during the second year, and remained stable afterwards. About one-third of patients had a BMD below the fracture threshold (= 0.798 g/cm2 for the lumbar spine and 0.675 g/cm2 for the hip) during the follow-up. In 5 of the 66 patients studied, new vertebral fractures occurred. No fractures or avascular necrosis of the hips were seen. Furthermore, after transplantation lower Z-scores of the hip were found in patients with pre-transplant cholestatic liver diseases, and lower Z-scores of the lumbar spine were found in men compared with women. Long-term follow-up of BMD up to 15 years after transplantation revealed an improvement mainly in the second postoperative year with no deterioration afterwards. Nevertheless a substantial number of patients (around one-third) kept a BMD below the fracture threshold, and new fractures may occasionally occur. The overall outcome appeared somewhat less favorable in men and patients transplanted for cholestatic liver diseases.
In children with differentiated thyroid cancer, treatment should consist of total thyroidectomy, followed by a modified radical neck dissection (when indicated) and iodine-131 ablation treatment. This aggressive approach seems to be justified because of the high incidence of nodal involvement and the low complication and recurrence rate after surgery.
To determine whether (18)fluorodeoxyglucose-positron emission tomography (FDG-PET) for the detection of recurrences or metastases of differentiated thyroid carcinoma should be performed during thyrotropin (TSH) suppression or TSH stimulation, eight patients were studied sequentially. After the second FDG-PET scan, a therapeutic (131)I dose was administered with posttherapy scans obtained 10 days later. Both FDG-PET scans were compared with each other and with the (131)I posttherapy whole body scans by two independent observers. Findings were verified using other imaging modalities or biopsies. Median TSH was 0.04 mU/L during TSH suppression and 64 mU/L during TSH stimulation. The FDG-PET scans during TSH suppression showed abnormalities in four patients and the FDG-PET scan during TSH stimulation in five patients. One patient was only positive during TSH stimulation. In two other patients the FDG-PET scan during TSH stimulation clearly identified more lesions, and in all positive patients lesion contrast was better during TSH stimulation. In two patients FDG-PET findings during TSH stimulation led to a change in clinical management. Thus, the performance of FDG-PET during TSH stimulation was either superior or equal to FDG-PET during TSH suppression, but never inferior. To detect metastatic or recurrent differentiated thyroid carcinoma FDG-PET should be performed during hypothyroidism, leading to TSH stimulation.
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