Transmural endoscopic drainage is a safe procedure with minimal complications. It should be the procedure of choice for pseudocysts associated with chronic pancreatitis or trauma, with a wall thickness of < 1 cm and a visible bulge into the gastrointestinal lumen. Forty percent of pseudocysts fulfilled these criteria in our study.
The extent and consequence of patient and professional delay in the diagnosis and treatment of 250 consecutive patients with primary cutaneous malignant melanoma was investigated. Mean total delay from the onset of observed change in a melanoma to appropriate therapy was 11.1 months. The major component of delay (9.8 months) was patient related. Seventy‐nine (31.6%) patients waited more than 6 months before seeking medical attention. Few patients recognized early melanoma, and 46% responded only to late features (i.e., ulceration or bleeding). Inappropriate professional delay (misdiagnosis or observation without specific action) occurred in 30 consultations (12.4%) and resulted in a further 1.3‐month mean delay in treatment. No correlation (r = 0.027) was found between delay in diagnosis and thickness of melanoma for the study population overall. A significant relationship (r = 0.2087; P < 0.05) was found between longer lag time and advanced disease in 92 patients with nodular melanoma. Asymptomatic melanomas incidentally diagnosed during routine skin surveillance were significantly more favorable (mean depth, 0.89 mm) than symptomatic melanoma (1.76 mm; P < 0.01). These data suggest that future public education campaigns should emphasize early signs of melanoma and that professional programs should stress routine skin surveillance and prompt referral of suspicious lesions for diagnostic biopsy.
Bile duct strictures are a common complication in patients with advanced chronic pancreatitis and have a variable clinical presentation ranging from an incidental finding to overt jaundice and cholangitis. The diagnosis is mostly made during investigations for abdominal pain but jaundice may be the initial clinical presentation. The jaundice is typically transient but may be recurrent with a small risk of secondary biliary cirrhosis in longstanding cases. The management of a bile duct stricture is conservative in patients in whom it is an incidental finding as the risk of secondary biliary cirrhosis is negligible. Initial conservative treatment is advised in patients who present with jaundice as most will resolve once the acute on chronic attack has subsided. A surgical biliary drainage is indicated when there is persistent jaundice for more than one month or if complicated by secondary gallstones or cholangitis. The biliary drainage procedure of choice is a choledocho-jejunostomy which may be combined with a pancreaticojejunostomy in patients who have associated pain. Since many patients with chronic pancreatitis have an inflammatory mass in the head of the pancreas, a Frey procedure is indicated but a resection should be performed when there is concern about a malignancy. Temporary endoscopic stenting is reserved for cholangitis while an expandable metal stent may be indicated in patients with severe co-morbid disease.
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