1.Self-Expandable Metallic Stent Placement in the Palliative Treatment of Malignant Obstruction of Gastric Outlet and Duodenum.
Erkan CAGLAR ; Ahmet DOBRUCALI
Clinical Endoscopy 2013;46(1):59-64
BACKGROUND/AIMS: To asses the usefulness of flexible metallic stents in the palliation of malignant obstruction of gastric outlet and duodenum. METHODS: Retrospective review was performed between January 2006 and December 2011 in 30 patients. Thirty consecutive patients with obstruction of the gastric outlet underwent palliative treatment with self-expandable flexible metallic stents. Complications and clinical outcomes were assessed. RESULTS: Twenty-four patients had advanced gastric carcinoma at the antrum and/or pylorus, four patients had obstruction at the pylorus due to pancreas tumours and one patient had duodedum and one patient had gall bladder tumour. Symptoms improved in 82.7% of the patients after the procedure. The improvement in ability to eat using the score system was statistically significant (p<0.001). Tumor ingrowth and/or overgrowth were seen in four patients (13.3%), and a second stent was inserted in these patients. The mean stent patency was 100 days (range, 5 to 410). The mean survival was 120.76+/-38.96 days. CONCLUSIONS: Endoscopic placement of self-expendable metallic stents under fluoroscopy is a safe and effective treatment for the palliation of patients with inoperable malignant gastric outlet obstruction caused by stomach or pancreas cancer.
Duodenum
;
Equidae
;
Fluoroscopy
;
Gastric Outlet Obstruction
;
Humans
;
Palliative Care
;
Pancreas
;
Pancreatic Neoplasms
;
Pylorus
;
Retrospective Studies
;
Stents
;
Stomach
;
Urinary Bladder
2.Long-Term Palliative Effect of Stenting in Gastric Outlet Obstruction Due to Transarterial Chemoembolization with Yttrium-90 in a Patient with Metastatic Neuroendocrine Tumor.
Erkan CAGLAR ; Gulen DOĞUSOY ; Levent KABASAKAL ; Ahmet DOBRUCALI
Clinical Endoscopy 2016;49(5):479-482
Internal radioembolization with yttrium-90 is a promising treatment method, predominantly for liver tumors. However, the shifting of yttrium-90-loaded spherules into the arteries and veins that supply the duodenum and stomach, leading to ulceration, hemorrhage, perforation, and outlet obstruction of these organs, is one of the major undesirable consequences of this technique. We report a case of gastric outlet obstruction (GOO) due to antropyloric stenosis with ulceration, edema, and inflammation following transarterial yttrium-90 treatment for a metastatic neuroendocrine tumor in a 58-year-old man. Stenting was used for palliation in this case. GOO improved after stenting and recovery of oral intake was permanent after stent removal.
Arteries
;
Constriction, Pathologic
;
Duodenum
;
Edema
;
Gastric Outlet Obstruction*
;
Hemorrhage
;
Humans
;
Inflammation
;
Liver
;
Methods
;
Middle Aged
;
Neuroendocrine Tumors*
;
Stents*
;
Stomach
;
Ulcer
;
Veins