1.Inverse ‘D’ incision technique in treatment of pilonidal sinus disease; excision with minimal tissue loss, closure without tension and lateral location of the suture line
Sami DOGAN ; Fuat CETIN ; Emin GURLEYIK
Annals of Surgical Treatment and Research 2019;97(5):261-265
PURPOSE: Surgical excision is the preferred treatment modality for sacrococcygeal pilonidal sinus (PS). Notably, the desirable features of an ideal surgical intervention are excision with minimal tissue loss, closure without tension, and a lateral suture line. The present study aimed to investigate early outcomes of surgical excision through the inverse D (ᗡ) incision based on tissue loss, wound tension, and suture line location. METHODS: This prospective study was comprised of 80 patients with PS in whom excision of PS was performed through the ‘ᗡ’ incision to minimize tissue loss with a tensionless primary surgical wound closure. The suture line was located laterally in all patients. Early and late postoperative complications, duration of hospital stay, return to work, and recurrence rates were investigated. The mean duration of the follow-up period was 36 months. RESULTS: Sixty-three patients (78.8%) were male. PS in all patients was surgically removed by subcutaneous excision through a ‘ᗡ’ incision. Laterally placed surgical wounds were closed primarily with interrupted vertical mattress sutures. No general complications were encountered. Five patients (6.3%) experienced early postoperative surgical site complications. On average, the duration of hospital stay and return to work were 2.4 days and 3.8 days, respectively. Recurrence was seen in 1 case (1.3%) during the follow-up period. Satisfaction score was high in 83.8% of patients. CONCLUSION: The method of sinus excision using the ‘ᗡ’ incision with a primary suture facilitates excision with minimal tissue loss and closure without tension with an off-midline suture. It is both a simple and effective surgical technique for the treatment of sacrococcygeal PS.
Follow-Up Studies
;
Humans
;
Length of Stay
;
Male
;
Methods
;
Pilonidal Sinus
;
Postoperative Complications
;
Prospective Studies
;
Recurrence
;
Return to Work
;
Sutures
;
Wounds and Injuries
2.Visual and electrophysiological identification of the external branch of superior laryngeal nerve in redo thyroid surgery compared with primary thyroid surgery
Emin GURLEYIK ; Sami DOGAN ; Fuat CETIN ; Gunay GURLEYIK
Annals of Surgical Treatment and Research 2019;96(6):269-274
PURPOSE: Thyroid reoperations are surgically challenging because of significant anatomical variance. Visual and functional identification of the external branch of the superior laryngeal nerve (EBSLN) were studied in 2 groups of patients who underwent primary and redo thyroid surgery. METHODS: This study was conducted on 200 patients: 100 patients with redo and 100 patients with primary thyroid surgery. In addition to visual identification, nerve branches were functionally identified by intraoperative nerve monitoring (IONM). Visual, functional, and total identification rates of the EBSLN in both primary and redo surgery were determined and compared between the 2 groups. RESULTS: We attempted to identify 138 and 170 EBSLNs at risk in redo and primary surgery, respectively. Visual identification rates were 65.3% and 30.4% (P < 0.001) in primary and redo surgery groups, respectively. In total, 164 (96.5%) and 97 EBSLNs (70.3%) were identified in primary and redo surgery, respectively (P < 0.001), including the use of IONM. In primary surgery group, 53 nonvisualized EBSLNs of 164 identified nerves (32.3%) were determined by IONM alone. In redo surgery group, 55 of 97 identified nerves (56.7%) were determined by IONM alone (P < 0.001). CONCLUSION: Both visual and total identification rates of the EBSLN are significantly decreased in reoperative thyroidectomy. IONM increases the total identification rate of the EBSLN in primary and redo thyroid surgery. Electrophysiological monitoring makes a substantial contribution to the identification of the EBSLN both in primary and especially in redo thyroid surgery.
Goiter
;
Humans
;
Intraoperative Neurophysiological Monitoring
;
Laryngeal Nerves
;
Recurrence
;
Thyroid Gland
;
Thyroidectomy
3.Detection of bone marrow involvement with FDG PET/CT in patients with newly diagnosed lymphoma.
H Tahsin ÖZPOLAT ; Ebru YILMAZ ; Hasan Sami GOKSOY ; Sahre ÖZPOLAT ; Oner DOGAN ; Seher Nilgun UNAL ; Meliha NALCACI
Blood Research 2018;53(4):281-287
BACKGROUND: Bone marrow involvement (BMI) affects the lymphoma stage, survival, and treatment. Bone marrow biopsy (BMB) and fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) positron emission tomography- computed tomography (PET/CT) are useful techniques to detect BMI. Both have advantages and disadvantages. We aimed to identify factors that could be used to predict BMI with positive and negative results on PET/CT compare them with BMB in newly diagnosed patients with lymphoma. METHODS: We included 22 non-Hodgkin and 16 Hodgkin lymphoma patients in this single center study. All patients had PET/CT examination and BMB before treatment. BMI in BMB was reported as negative or positive. Bone marrow was classified into 3 types by FDG uptake on PT/CT; diffuse involvement, focal involvement, and normal bone marrow. RESULTS: PET/CT and BMB results were concordant (7 positive, 15 negative) in 22 patients (57%). We evaluated concordant and discordant patient characteristics and risk-stratified patients for BMI. Our findings suggest that patients with diffuse FDG uptake on PET/CT, especially patients with advanced age and low platelet and white blood cell counts, are likely to have BMI and could potentially forego BMB. Patients with negative PET/CT findings and no significant laboratory abnormalities are very unlikely to have BMI. CONCLUSION: Our results suggest that BMI should not be decided solely based PET/CT or BMB findings. It is reasonable to use both diagnostic assays along with clinical and laboratory findings. PET/CT result, clinical and laboratory findings could be useful for predicting BMI in patient for whom BMB is contraindicated.
Biopsy
;
Blood Platelets
;
Bone Marrow*
;
Electrons
;
Hodgkin Disease
;
Humans
;
Leukocyte Count
;
Lymphoma*
;
Positron-Emission Tomography and Computed Tomography*