Surgical treatment of a solitary pulmonary metastasis concurrent with or after resection of hepatic metastases from colorectal cancer may be appropriate if the hepatic metastases are resectable for cure. Patients with a solitary pulmonary metastasis and a small number of hepatic metastases are good candidates for resection. Long-term survival can be expected.
Twenty-four thyroid carcinoma patients with infiltration of the trachea were treated surgically. The histological diagnosis in these cases included papillary adenocarcinoma in 22 different patients, medullary carcinoma in one patient, and undifferentiated carcinoma in one patient. In 19 of the patients hemoptysis was noted, and dyspnea was present in ten patients. In 14 of the 24 patients the carcinoma was diagnosed by radiographs of the neck, while in seven patients it was demonstrated bronchoscopically. In three patients tracheal infiltration by thyroid carcinoma was diagnosed by biopsy of the tracheal wall at operation. When the tracheal wall was infiltrated by thyroid carcinoma, treatment consisted of circumferential resection of the involved segment of the trachea followed by an end-to-end anastomosis. Of the 24 patients, 17 survived and six died. In the 17 patients who survived, 13 were disease free. Of this number, six survived more than five years after the initial tracheal resection.
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