Tissue specimens from 283 principally spontaneously (naturally) desiccated human mummies from coastal and low valley sites in northern Chile and southern Peru were tested with a DNA probe directed at a kinetoplast DNA segment of Trypanosoma cruzi.
The contention that the R2 radical gastrectomy for localized and potentially curable gastric carcinoma may be superior to gastrectomy without lymphadenectomy (R1) was assessed by randomized trial. Five years after commencement 403 patients have been evaluated at surgery and only 43 (11 per cent) found eligible (S0-2, P0, H0, N0-1), 22 of whom underwent R1 and 21 R2 gastrectomy. Seven patients had final histological stages in excess of the protocol. The R2 group had a longer operating time (P less than 0.005), a greater blood transfusion requirement (P less than 0.005), a longer hospital stay (0.05 greater than P greater than 0.025) and required reoperation in four cases. There were no postoperative deaths. Four patients have died from the disease in the R1 group and five in the R2 group, there being no difference in the probability of survival at a median follow-up of 3.1 years. The small proportion of patients suitable for radical R2 surgery, the high associated morbidity and the fact that survival advantage has yet to be proven in trial suggest that this procedure should not yet be performed outside of controlled clinical trials.
Metronidazole has been used to treat pouchitis, but there are no controlled data that show it is effective. Chronic unremitting pouchitis is a form of the disorder particularly difficult to manage. Diarrhea is the main symptom of pouchitis, which results from acute inflammation of the mucosa of an ileal reservoir. To test the hypothesis that metronidazole (400 mg thrice daily for seven days) is no better than placebo at reducing stool frequency in chronic unremitting pouchitis, a double-blind placebo-controlled crossover study has been performed. Thirteen patients who had undergone restorative proctocolectomy for ulcerative colitis were studied. The diagnosis of pouchitis was based on clinical, endoscopic, and histological criteria. At entry all patients had symptomatic pouchitis and were passing more than six stools/24 hr or had consistently bloody stools with at least four of six endoscopic criteria of mucosal inflammation. The median frequency of defecation decreased by 3 bowel actions/24 hr (conservative 95% confidence intervals 0-4/24 hr) on metronidazole but increased by a median of 1/24 hr on placebo. The difference between the median number of bowel motions, when treatment with metronidazole was compared to placebo, was 4 motions/24 hr (P < 0.05) in favor of metronidazole. There was no significant change in the endoscopic or histological grade of inflammation, in the serum C-reactive protein level, or symptomatic scores. In a parallel study, metronidazole did not alter stool frequency in asymptomatic patients without pouchitis who had endoscopically normal reservoirs (six polyposis, six colitis).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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