A study of 57 patients admitted to the Department of Emergency Surgery at the Ospedale Maggiore in Milan between 1980 and 1992 following the recent ingestion of a caustic substance is presented herein. Through this study, an aggressive diagnostic and therapeutic approach has been employed, including early surgery which plays a fundamental role in the prevention of acute hemorrhagic or perforative complications as well as in the development of scar tissue and neoplastic strictures over time. The criteria for early emergency surgery were the presence of endoscopic grade 3 and 4 lesions as well as those on the borderline between grades 2 and 3 with clinical symptoms. In 11 patients with lesions of moderate severity, the treatment of choice was medical therapy, which required subsequent surgical intervention for strictures in 5 patients. In 13 patients with severe lesions, an early surgical approach was performed with a mortality rate of 23%.
Two cases of superior mesenteric artery syndrome are presented. In both, conclusive diagnosis was made noninvasively in the presence of acute symptoms by obtaining details of the duodenum and vessels in a sonographic investigation.
The previously unreported ultrasonographic (US) features of liver metastases of pancreatic glucagonoma and of pancreatic acinar cell carcinoma are described. They present as complex masses with hyperechoic solid component, containing echo-free cystic areas; these sonographic features markedly differ from the echo-poor US pattern of the much more common metastases of pancreatic ductal carcinoma. Survival from diagnosis of liver metastases was 45 months in the patient with pancreatic glucagonoma and 23 months in the patient with acinar cell carcinoma. These survivals were much longer than the expected survival of patients with pancreatic ductal carcinoma metastatic to the liver. The US finding of highly reflective lesions in the liver, containing echo-free cystic areas, should alert one that the primary pancreatic tumor has a histotype different from ductal carcinoma. Such US findings could affect the decision to resect the pancreatic tumor and its liver metastases, if histology confirms a malignancy less aggressive than ductal carcinoma.
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