Over the past 5 years we have developed a multidisciplinary service for the treatment of extremity sarcoma. This service includes orthopedic oncology, neurosurgery, medical and radiation oncology, and plastic surgery. Prior to 2007, the role of plastic surgery in this multidisciplinary team was limited. After 2007, plastic surgery at our institution played an increasingly integral role in multidisciplinary care. Based on the development of the plastic surgery service at our institution, we were able to evaluate the role of plastic surgery in the outcomes following extremity reconstruction after sarcoma resection. We hypothesize that plastic surgery involvement would reduce the amputation rate without altering recurrence rates. We found a decrease in lower-extremity amputation of approximately 20% without any significant change in recurrence rates. The incidence of infectious complications requiring IV antibiotics decreased by about 20%. The incidence of skin graft loss decreased by 75%. We do report a significant increase in partial flap necrosis. Overall, plastic surgery is an essential component of the multidisciplinary team in the care of extremity sarcoma.
Laparoscopic percutaneous feeding jejunostomy is a safe and simple technique that adds little to the morbidity and cost of managing patients with esophagogastric cancers. It facilitates optimization of nutrition in the perioperative period for these patients, especially in those receiving preoperative chemotherapy.
BackgroundOmental cysts are rare abdominal lesions and are difficult to diagnose. Mostly they are detected incidentally during imaging studies performed for unrelated reasons.Case presentationPresentation can be both acute and chronic. Acute presentations are usually due to complication in cyst. Imaging is helpful in excluding other causes of lump abdomen.We encountered a case of giant lymphatic cyst presenting with abdominal swelling, clinically mimicking huge ovarian cyst.ConclusionThe goal of surgical therapy is complete excision of the cyst, and Omental cysts can be removed without endangering the adjacent bowel.
IOUS increases diagnostic yield but a significant proportion of patients with occult hepatic metastases are not detected. IOUS improves disease staging in some patients refining the indications for adjuvant therapy and enhancing the estimate of prognosis and improving decision-making.
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.