Background. This study evaluated the prognosis of patients with carcinoma in the gastric remnant stump after distal gastrectomy for benign disease (stump cancer).
Methods. Twenty patients with resected stump cancer were studied and compared with 266 patients with resected primary cancer in the upper third of the stomach (primary cancer).
Results. The percentages of lymph nodes with metastases located at the lesser curvature and the left gastric artery, respectively, were 50.0% and 25.2% in patients with primary cancer and 15.0% and 5.0% in patients with stump cancer. In patients with remnant gastric cancer, lymph node metastases at jejunal mesentery near anastomotic site were found in 2 of 20 (10.0%).
Conclusion. The lymph flow from the remnant stomach seems to be changed by the initial operation, and as a result, in stump cancer, metastatic lymph nodes are located at different places from those associated with primary cancer. Even when curative surgery is performed in patients with stump cancer, it is important to follow up patients and check for possible metastasis to the liver.
The 5‐year survival rates were 62.1% and 52.5% for patients with curatively resected primary cancer (n = 203) and stump cancer (n = 17), respectively, and there was no statistical difference between the two groups. There was a distinct difference in terms of patterns of recurrence between patients with curatively resected primary cancer and those with stump cancer. The percentages of peritoneal and hematogenic metastases, respectively, were 40.6% and 31.3% in primary cancer and 0% and 83.3% in stump cancers.
Accurate alignment of an intraocular lens (IOL) is indispensable for achieving accurate postoperative refractive outcomes. Thus, we evaluated decentration and tilt of single- and three-piece IOLs, as well as anterior chamber depth (ACD), at 3 hours, 24 hours, 2 weeks, and 4 weeks after cataract surgery, using swept-source anterior segment optical coherence tomography. There was no significant difference in postoperative visual acuity between eyes with single- or three-piece IOLs. Absolute values of IOL decentration at 24 hours and 2 weeks after surgery were significantly larger (P = 0.008 and 0.046, respectively) in eyes with the single-piece IOL than in those with the three-piece IOL. Both single- and three-piece IOLs tended to tilt toward the inferotemporal direction; however, there was no significant difference in the absolute values of IOL tilt at any postoperative time point. ACD at 24 hours after surgery was significantly deeper (P = 0.009) in eyes with the three-piece IOL, compared with eyes with the single-piece IOL. Therefore, although both single- and three-piece IOL locations varied transiently after surgery, IOL locations were similar between both IOLs at 4 weeks after surgery and were not associated with any statistical difference in visual function.
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.