1.Study on nuclear DNA content and image cytometry in cervical cancer and precursor lesions
Yubing JIAO ; Xianmei ZHOU ; Shixiong MA
Chinese Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology 2001;0(05):-
Objective The aim of this research was to study the biological and clinical features of cervical cancer and precursor lesions Methods Nuclear DNA was analyzed by image cytometry (ICM) in 125 embedded tissue 5 ?m sections stained with Feulgen stain Samples included normal cervical squamous epithelium ( n =11), cervical intraepithelial neoplasiaⅠ (CINⅠ) ( n =22), CINⅡ ( n =17) and CINⅢ ( n =13), cervical neoplasm ( n =62) Results The mean DNA content, nuclear area increased progressively from normal cervical epithelium, CINⅠ , CINⅡ , CINⅢ to invasive squamous carcinoma Statistical analysis revealed significant difference ( P
2.Minimally invasive technique of device closure of ventricular septal defect through parasternal approach
Debin LIU ; Xiaofeng WANG ; Wei WANG ; Weifan WANG ; Shixiong WANG ; Qi MA ; Bingren GAO
Chinese Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery 2016;32(10):584-589
Objective To evaluate the safety aod efficacy of device closure of ventricular septal defect (VSD) through parasternal approach,and to compare the advantages and disadvantages of three approaches.Methods Between Jan 2012 and Jul 2015,209 cases(Group A) underwent per-ventricular device closure of VSD through a left parasternal approach,and 36 cases(Group B) underwent per-atrial device closure of VSD through a fight parasternal approach,and 49 cases(Group C) underwent per-ventricular device closure of VSD through a median sternotomy approach.In group A,a 1.0 to 2.0 cm left parasternal iucision was made in the fourth or third intercostal space.Press the right ventricular(RV) free wall to select the puncture point.After securing double purse-string suture around the optimal puncture site,the occluder was introduced via a sheath inserted directly into the RV and navigation and positioning of the device guided by transesophageal echocardiography(TEE).In group B,a 1.0 to 2.0 cm right parasternal incision was made in the fourth or third intercostal space.After securing double purse-string suture at the right atrium near the atrioventricular groove,a specially designed hollow probe was inserted into the right atrium and was passed through the tricuspid valve into the right ventricle.The tip of the probe was manipulated to aim at or cross VSD,and a spring guide-wire was inserted into the left veotricle(LV) through the channel of the probe under TEE guidance.Then the delivery sheath was positioned into LV passing over the wire,and the device was pushed into the sheath and was deployed to finish closure.In group C,after a 1.5 to 3.0 cm median sternal incision was made,the closure of VSD was finished as the same procedure as in group A.Results There was no significant differences at the age and weight between 3 groups,as well as the size of VSD and devices.But the position of VSD varied between 3 groups.The rate of successful closure in group A (98.1%,205/209) and B (97.2%,35/36) was similar to group C (97.9%,48/49).The mean intracardiac manipulating time was shorter in group A(10 ± 6) min and group C (7 ± 5) min than in group B(19 ± 11) min.The mean time of skin cut to suture was shorter in group A(40 ± 15) min and group B(43 ± 17) min than in group C(55 ±21) min.And the average hospitalization time in group A (5.9 ± 2.2) days and group B (5.5 ± 2.7) days was shorter than in group C (8.3 ± 3.6) days.During the follow-up period of 1 to 40 months,no obvious residual leakage,arrhythmia or valvular inadequacy were found in all cases,and no device dropped out.Conclusion Minimally invasive technique of device closure of VSD through parasternal approach appears to be safe and effective,further reducing trauma and recovering faster than median sternal approach.Accurate and all-round TEE evaluation is very important to case selection of VSD.Individually procedure approach should be performed according to the size,position,and path and flow direction of VSD.
3.Spleen and splenic vessel-preserving distal pancreatectomy
Jinping MA ; Lin PENG ; Gang ZHAO ; Shirong CAI ; Chuangqi CHEN ; Shixiong HU ; Kaiming WU ; Fanghai HAN ; Yulong HE ; Wenhua ZHAN
Chinese Journal of General Surgery 2010;25(12):949-951
Objective To study the feasibility, safety and clinical effects of spleen and splenic vessel-preserving distal pancreatectomy. Methods A retrospective study was performed in 26 patients undergoing distal pancreatectomy for benign or low grade malignant disease with splenectomy (n = 13) or splenic preservation (n = 13 ) at the First Hospital of Sun Yat-sen University and Guangdong General Hospital from May 2002 to April 2009. Results All 26 pancreatectomy with splenectomy or splenic preservation were performed successfully. There was no statistically significant difference between two groups in average operative time[(172±47) min vs. (157±52) min, P > 0.05 ], intraoperative estimated blood loss [( 183 ± 68 ) ml vs. ( 160 ± 51 ) ml, P > 0.05 ], incidence of noninfectious and infection complication and postoperative hospital stay [(10.1±2.2) d vs. ( 12. 1 ± 4. 6 ) d, P > 0.05 ]. The platelet counts examined one week after operation were significantly higher in the distal pancreatectomy with splenectomy group than that in spleen-preserving group [(37.3 ± 12.8)×109/L vs. (54.7 ± 13.2) × 109/L, P<0.05 ]. Conclusions Spleen-preserving distal pancreatectomy appears to be a feasible and safe procedure in selected cases of benign or low-grade pancreatic malignant disease necessitating a distal pancreatectomy.
5.Different surgical procedures for Stanford type A aortic dissection: A case control study
ZHAO Yinglu ; WANG Weifan ; WANG Wei ; HE Fengxiao ; WANG Shixiong ; XUE Yu ; MA Qi ; GAO Bingren ; LIU Debin
Chinese Journal of Clinical Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery 2019;26(7):664-669
Objective To analyze the near-term clinical efficacy of two different surgical procedures (Sun's procedure and Debranching combined endovascular stent-graft procedure) to cure Stanford type A aortic dissection, and summarize the clinical experience to help better master the indications of the two surgical procedures. Methods We retrospectively analyzed the clinical data of 46 patients with Stanford A aortic dissection in our hospital between September 2014 and September 2017. There were 39 males and 7 females at age of 20–74 (48.67±11.80) years. According to different surgical methods, the patients were divided into a Sun's procedure group (26 patients) and a debranching combined endovascular stent-graft procedure group (20 patients). The clinical effect of the two groups was compared. Results The debranching combined endovascular stent-graft procedure group was significantly superior to the Sun's group in cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) time, aortic cross clamp(ACC) time, intraoperative urine output, postoperative mechanical ventilation time, postoperative 24 h volumes of drain, CICU time, renal function recovery of postoperative 72 h and total hospital stay(P<0.05). The incidence of transient neurological damage after operation in the debranching combined endovascular stent-graft procedure group was significantly lower than that of the Sun's procedure group(P<0.05). The follow-up time ranged from 3 to 36 months. And the follow-up rate was 90.5%. One patient in the Sun's procedure group died of serious pulmonary infection postoperative 30 days. One patient in the debranching combined endovascular stent-graft group was found to have internal leakage in the early postoperative examination and disappeared after 6 months. Sun's procedure group did not find endoleak. All patients during the follow-up time did not appear brain, coagulation disorders, stroke, paraplegia, upper limb ischemia and other complications. Conclusion For Stanford type A aortic dissection, debranching combined surgery may have the risk of postoperative endoleak, but the overall effect is superior to Sun's operation. Therefore, debranching combined surgery should be preferred for the treatment of this type of dissection.
6.Right anterolateral minithoracotomy versus traditional median sternotomy in left atrial myxoma treatment: A case control study
HE Fengxiao ; WANG Weifan ; WANG Shixiong ; WANG Wei ; MA Qi ; XUE Yu ; LIU Debin ; GAO Bingren ; SUN Jing
Chinese Journal of Clinical Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery 2019;26(1):78-82
Objective To compare right anterolateral minithoracotomy and traditional median sternotomy in the treatment of left atrial myxoma. Methods Forty-one patients with left atrial myxoma treated in our hospital from January 2009 to January 2018 were divided into two groups according to the operation method: a right anterolateral minithoracotomy group including 15 patients, with 7 males and 8 females, aged 45.1±15.4 years; a median sternotomy group including 26 patients, with 10 males and 16 females, aged 49.4±11.9 years. The clinical data of the two groups were compared. Results There was no significant difference in preoperative clinical data between the two groups. All patients completed the operation without perioperative death. There was no significant difference in the operation time, cardiopulmonary bypass time, aortic clamp time or the incidence of postoperative complications between the two groups. However, compared with the median sternotomy group, the right anterolateral minithoracotomy group had shorter duration of mechanical ventilation, ICU stay and postoperative hospital stay, and less volume of drainage and blood transfusion 24 hours after surgery (all P<0.05). After 3–106 months follow-up, no recurrence was observed in both groups. Conclusion Compared with traditional median sternotomy for left atrial myxoma resection, right anterolateral minithoracotomy is safe, effective and less traumatic. It can be used as a routine treatment for left atrial myxoma.
7.Clinical effect of loop-in-loop technique and annuloplasty ring for the treatment of mitral valve prolapse under total thoracoscopy
WANG Shixiong ; GAO Binren ; LI Ningyin ; WANG Wei ; WANG Weifan ; MA Qi ; HE Fengxiao ; XUE Yu ; LIU Debin
Chinese Journal of Clinical Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery 2019;26(8):759-765
Objective To analyze the effect of loop-in-loop technique and annuloplasty ring for the treatment of mitral valve prolapse (MVP) under total thoracoscopy. Methods Between May 2012 and May 2017, 21 patients with MVP underwent mitral valve repair in our hospital. There were 12 males and 9 females with a mean age of 50.90±9.66 years and the mean weight of 64.81±11.56 kg. Loop-in-loop artificial chordae tendonae reconstruction and mitral annuloplasty were performed through the right atrial-atrial septal incision under total thoracoscopy. The water test and transesophageal echocardiography were performed during the operation to evaluate the effect of mitral annuloplasty. Data of echocardiography and chest radiography were collected postoperatively one week, before discharge and after discharge. Results All the operations were successful without re-valvupoplasty or valve replacement, conversion to median thoracotomy, malignant arrhythmia, perioperative death or wound infection. Among them, 10 patients underwent tricuspid valvuloplasty, 1 patient underwent tricuspid valvuloplasty plus radiofrequency ablation simultaneously. The mean cardiopulmonary bypass time was 255.57±37.24 minutes, aortic occlusion time was 162.24±19.61 minutes, the number of loop was 2–5 (3.29±0.78), the size of ring was 28–34 (31.11±1.88) mm, ventilator assistance time was 19.43±14.68 hours, ICU time was 58.45±24.60 hours and postoperative hospital stay was 12.28±3.61 days. Transthoracic echocardiography was re-examined postoperatively. Mild-mitral regurgitation was found in 3 patients. Warfarin anticoagulant therapy was given orally for 6 months postoperatively. The patients were followed up regularly for 2–51 months at 1, 3, 6 and 12 months postoperatively. Left ventricular end-diastolic diameter (LVEDD) was 45.06±2.96 mm, left ventricular end-diastolic volume 108.11±17.09 mL, left atrial diameter (LAD) 35.56±6.93 mm and cardiothoracic ratio 0.53±0.13 at discharge which were significantly smaller than those at admission (P<0.05). Pulmonary artery pressure was 19.22±6.38 mm Hg which was significantly lower than that at admission (P<0.05), but left ventricular ejection fraction (62.33%±4.00%) had no significant change (P>0.05). The LAD and LVEDD were significantly smaller than those before operation, and the cardiac function improved to some extent during the follow-up. No new mitral valve prolapse, increased regurgitation, infective endocarditis, thromboembolism or anticoagulation-related complications were found during the follow-up. Conclusion Loop-in-loop artificial chordae tendon implantation combined with mitral annuloplasty is a safe and effective method for MVP under total thoracoscopy with minimal trauma, satisfactory cosmetic effect, and good early- and medium-term results. It is worth of popularizing. However, the operation time needs to be further shortened, and its long-term clinical effect needs further follow-up and other researches to confirm.