The accuracy of intraoperative ultrasonography in diagnosing liver metastasis was evaluated at the time of surgery and at follow-up in 189 patients with colorectal cancers. Evaluation at the time of operation revealed that the sensitivity of intraoperative ultrasonography (93.3%) was significantly (p less than 0.0001) higher than that of preoperative ultrasonography (41.3%), conventional computed tomography (47.1%), and surgical exploration (66.3%). Twenty-two of 104 metastatic liver tumors were detected solely by intraoperative ultrasonography in 18 patients (9.5% of total patients). These 22 tumors were small in size (4 x 4 mm to 15 x 18 mm) and nonpalpable during operation. During the postoperative follow-up period of 18 months or more (mean 35.6 months, median 37.1 months) after colorectal surgery, liver metastases that were unrecognized during surgery appeared in 13 (6.9%) patients. Re-evaluation based on these follow-up results indicated that the sensitivity of intraoperative ultrasonography decreased to 82.3%, which was still significantly (p less than 0.0005) better than that of other methods. Intraoperative ultrasonography was capable of identifying 18 of 31 (58.1%) patients in whom liver metastases were otherwise unrecognized at the time of operation. Intraoperative ultrasonography is more accurate in diagnosing liver metastasis than traditional screening methods, and may have a beneficial impact on the management of colorectal cancer.
One hundred cases of patients who underwent urgent cholecystectomy after presenting with symptoms of acute or subacute gallbladder disease were retrospectively reviewed. Sixty patients had pathologically proved acute cholecystitis, and 40 had chronic cholecystitis alone. One patient had an incidental gallbladder carcinoma, and four had global gangrene of the gallbladder. Focal ischemia, transmural hemorrhage, or focal necrosis (indicating more severe disease) was present in 19 patients. Fifty-four percent of patients had thin-walled gallbladders. Among patients with more severe acute disease, 56% had thin walls. Conversely, 24% of thin-walled gallbladders and 22% of thick-walled gallbladders had evidence of focal necrosis or gangrene. We conclude that gallbladder wall thickness, although demonstrable on preoperative ultrasound examination in all patients, does not correlate directly with severity of disease or pathologic findings.
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