MEETING AT THE LUTON AND DUNSTABLE HOSPITAL, LUTON, BEDS Aspergiliosis Complicating Pulmonary Tuberculosis.-DoNALD BARLOW, M.S., F.R.C.S. M. N., female, aged 25. Had bronchiectasis of the whole left lung with a large apical cavity and secondary tuberculous infection. A left pneumonectomy was undertaken and during the removal of the lung the apical cavity was opened.Aspergillosis developed in the pleura and later she had a bronchopleural fistula. She became sensitized to the fungus and ran a persistent high temperature and steadily became more ill and emaciated. The fungus infection in the pleura failed to respond to any of the known antibiotics, to PAS, isoniazid or the sulphonamides. It was resistant to iodides, neoarsphenamine, actidione and hydroxystilbamide. Fortunately it responded well to Phenoxetol and after prolonged treatment of the pleural cavity with this drug, she eventually made steady improvement and has now put on 1 J st.
THIS paper is based on an experience of 61 cases of achalasia seen between the years 1936 and 1960.True reflex spasm of the cardia is not under consideration. It is cured by the removal of the exciting cause.In 1876 Zenker studied 17 cases of "simple ecstasy of the oesophagus" and in 1884 von Mickulicz (1904) coined the name " Cardio-spasm".Between the years 1908 and 1912 Plummer (1912) and his colleagues in the Mayo Clinic collected a large series of cases and studied methods of diagnosis and treatment. From this work came the Hummer's bag dilator, later modified by Negus in this country. This bag gave great relief to many sufferers, but, because of the risks involved and the fact that it did not really take into account the pathology involved, was later largely superseded.In I903 G. Manvedel devised a method of approach to the cardiac end of the stomach by making an incision parallel with the left costal margin and dividing costal cartilages with ribs 7, 8, and 9 and hinging up the whole left costal margin.
E. Heller in 1914 used this approach in his nowclassical operation of oesophagoplasty. He believed that the cause of the lesion was a true spasm of the circular muscle of the lower 3 cm. of the oesophagus, but he recorded that there was no hypertrophy of muscle in the affected segment. He was the first to see, however, that there was gross and obvious hypertrophy of the oesophageal musculature above the segment. He noted, too, that even under deep anaesthesia the contracted cardiac segment did not relax, and he therefore applied the principle of Rammstedt and divided the longitudinal and circular muscle fibres over the whole affected area. He did this both on the anterior and posterior surfaces in order to ensure an adequate bulge of the mucosa and to effect complete relief. He made no comment in his paper about the obvious contrast between the grossly hypertrophic muscle lesion of the pyloric sphincter and the thin attenuated type of muscle at the lower end of the oesophagus with the hypertrophy confined to the area above it.The principle of Heller's operation is still considered the most effective method of relief to-day, but the operation itself was simplified to its present form in 1942 by Barlow, who used an ordinary paramedian incision and a single anterior division of the musculature.In 1924 Vinson presented a detailed review of 415 patients. He noted that many cases were clearly of long standing before symptoms were sufficiently marked for patients to seek advice. The muscular hypertrophy above the lesion had kept pace, as it were, for long periods with the increasing obstruction. In the long run there was 'esophageal decompensation' often corresponding with the first symptoms of illness.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.