Comparable survival was seen after MIDP and ODP for PDAC, but the opposing differences in R0 resection rate, resection of Gerota's fascia, and lymph node retrieval strengthen the need for a randomized trial to confirm the oncological safety of MIDP.
percutaneous therapeutic interventions under X-ray control were performed in patients with exudative complications. Results: Sensitivity, specificity and diagnostic accuracy of ultrasound imaging were respectively 84.7%, 73.4% and 78.8%. Sensitivity, specificity and diagnostic efficiency of cytological and microbiological examination of our data were, respectively, 86.9%, 95.2% and 91.6%. 737 miniinvasive percutaneous interventions were hold totaly. The implementation of miniinvasive percutaneous interventions helped to stop the disease process and to avoid open surgical procedures in 91.7% of cases. Conclusion: Fine-needle diagnostic puncture is a highly informative method for diagnosis of the nature and details of tissue damage and pathological process phase. The timely refining ultrasound diagnosis of various clinical and morphological forms of acute pancreatitis combined with diagnostic fine-needle puncture conducting allows to approach differentiately to the implementation of miniinvasive percutaneous interventions and to justify a strategic position in the surgical treatment of destructive pancreatitis.
LAPS is currently in its development and exploration stages, as defined by the international IDEAL framework for surgical innovation. LDP is feasible and safe, performed in many centers, while LPD is limited to few centers. RCTs and registry studies are essential to proceed with the assessment of LAPS.
Despite an initial improvement in severe complications for venous resection during pancreatoduodenectomy, this was not maintained over time. Every fourth patient with venous resection needed relaparotomy, most frequently for bleeding.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.