Locomotor recovery after stroke may be associated with improvement of asymmetry in SMC activation and enhanced PMC activation in the affected hemisphere.
Carcinoma of the pancreatobiliary system often produces perineural invasion extending to extrabiliary and extrapancreatic sites. A surgical technique has been developed to manage this invasion and has been used since 1974. Serial sections were prepared from 90 resected specimens and examined for perineural involvement of intramural and extramural biliary plexuses as well as the pancreatic nerve plexus. Perineural invasion was seen in 34 of 40 patients with carcinoma of the common bile duct, in ten of 14 with cancer of the gallbladder and in four of 15 with carcinoma of the papilla of Vater. Invasion extended to the extramural biliary or pancreatic nerve plexuses in 24 of 40 patients with carcinoma of the bile duct. Involvement of the intrapancreatic nerves was seen in all 21 patients with carcinoma of the pancreatic head and that of the pancreatic nerve plexus in 17 of 21. Perineural invasion was often found at the most progressive margin of the tumour. The survival rate of patients with perineural invasion was low compared with that of those without such invasion, although survival of patients with perineural invasion tended to be longer after extensive resection. The perineural space should be regarded as an important route for the spread of pancreatic and biliary carcinoma.
Thirty‐four patients who had resection of cancer of the pancreatic head were examined clinicopathologically to elucidate neural invasion of cancer of the pancreatic head to the extrapancreatic nerve plexus. Invasion of cancer to the retropancreatic tissue (rp+) was observed in 29 (85%) of the 34 patients, and neural invasion to the extrapancreatic nerve plexus was observed in 21 (72%) of the 29 patients with rp+. The incidence of invasion to the second region of the nerve plexus of the pancreatic head was high (14 patients; 67%). The degree of the neural invasion tended to increase as the intrapancreatic neural invasion became more severe and lymph vessel invasion more marked. Based on these findings, en bloc resection of the retropancreatic tissue involving the nerve plexus and fat tissue is necessary in the surgical treatment of cancer of the pancreatic head. Cancer 1992; 69:930–935.
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