Although mortality is low after the modified Fontan procedure, there is a significant percentage of patients with prolonged postoperative recovery. The objective of this study is to evaluate the usefulness of postoperative administration of oral sildenafil and inhaled nitric oxide on early postoperative outcome. A prospective interventional and comparison study with a historical cohort was conducted. Between January, 2010 and March, 2013, 16 patients received oral sildenafil during immediate modified Fontan postoperative period. Inhaled nitric oxide was also administered if the patient was kept intubated 12 hours after surgery. Early postoperative outcome was compared with a historical cohort of 32 patients on whom the modified Fontan procedure was performed between March, 2000 and December, 2009. Postoperative administration of sildenafil and nitric oxide had no influence on early postoperative outcome after the modified Fontan procedure in terms of duration of pleural effusions, mechanical ventilation time, length of stay in the ICU, and length of hospital stay.
The value of intraoperative frozen-section biopsy of thyroid nodules (solitary or dominant in a multinodular goitre) was examined in patients who underwent fine-needle aspiration cytology (FNAC) for diagnosis before operation. A total of 170 consecutive patients were evaluated and classified according to whether the cytological diagnosis was benign, suspicious or malignant. In the benign group, diagnostic accuracy was 98 per cent for FNAC and 97 per cent for intraoperative biopsy. In those with suspicious cytology, diagnostic accuracy was 12 per cent for FNAC and 96 per cent for intraoperative biopsy. In those with malignant cytology there was 100 per cent accuracy for FNAC and 76 per cent for biopsy. Intraoperative biopsy by frozen section is useful in patients undergoing surgery for a thyroid nodule with a 'suspicious' cytology. It adds no information in patients with a diagnosis of malignancy following cytological assessment and is of limited use in those in whom a benign lesion is diagnosed.
Although fine-needle aspiration is being currently accepted as the most reliable method to select patients with thyroid nodules for surgery, controversy remains about the accuracy in distinguishing benign nodules. We present our results from 636 fine-needle aspirations performed from 1984 to 1989. Our article focuses on the value of cytologic expertise and repeated punctures for follow-up of benign nodules. We found annual figures for specificity and positive predictive value to increase steadily from 1984 to 1989, thus suggesting that the power of the test is proportional to the experience of the cytologist. We also state that the value of performing repeated punctures for the follow-up of unselected benign nodules is low.
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