1.Surgery for a Large Thrombus in the Ascending Aorta with Acute Arterial Occlusive Disease
Yoshimasa Oda ; Hitoshi Oteki ; Kozo Naito ; Zyunichi Murayama ; Manabu Sato
Japanese Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery 2016;45(5):251-253
We report a rare case of a large thrombus in the ascending aorta with acute arterial occlusive disease. A 61-year-old man was transferred to our hospital with sudden pain and cyanosis. Contrast-enhanced computed tomography detected left ulnar arterial occlusion and a large mass in the ascending aorta, so we performed surgery to remove the large thrombus under cardiopulmonary bypass. Histologically, the mass was a fibrin thrombus. In addition, thickened endothelial lining and slight atheromatous degeneration was detected in the resected aortic wall. The patient was discharged from the hospital on postoperative day 22.
2.A Case of Infectious Pseudoaneurysm Caused by Delayed Onset Osteomyelitis of the Sternum
Yoshimasa Oda ; Yuji Katayama ; Shugo Koga ; Kiyokazu Koga
Japanese Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery 2017;46(5):260-263
We report a case of an infected aortic pseudoaneurysm caused by delayed sternal osteomyelitis. A 79-year-old man underwent combined surgery comprising aortic valve replacement (AVR), coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) and permanent pacemaker implantation at our department due to aortic insufficiency (third degree), coronary sclerosis, and sick sinus syndrome (type 1). The subject was discharged home on postoperative day (POD) 27. Sternal osteomyelitis developed on POD 50, and the subject was re-hospitalized. However, on day 6 of readmission, auscultation revealed a new systolic murmur (Levin IV/VI) in the second right intercostal space sternal border and transthoracic echocardiography showed abnormal blood flow from the base of the aorta to the left front. Contrast-enhanced computed tomography (CT) revealed an infected pseudoaneurysm of the ascending aorta that was not detected by CT at readmission. An infected aortic pseudoaneurysm caused by delayed sternal osteomyelitis was diagnosed. On day 8 of readmission, the pseudoaneurysm was excised and the ascending aorta was replaced. Intraoperative findings revealed that the aortic pseudoaneurysm had formed from the site of the ascending aorta anastomosis at the time of performing AVR and that part of the aneurysm had perforated into the right ventricular outflow tract. In the present case, the new cardiac murmur identified on auscultation and consequently performing echocardiography at the bedside led to the definitive diagnosis.
3.Potential Applicability of Local Resection With Prophylactic Left Gastric Artery Basin Dissection for Early-Stage Gastric Cancer in the Upper Third of the Stomach
Yoshimasa AKASHI ; Koichi OGAWA ; Katsuji HISAKURA ; Tsuyoshi ENOMOTO ; Yusuke OHARA ; Yohei OWADA ; Shinji HASHIMOTO ; Kazuhiro TAKAHASHI ; Osamu SHIMOMURA ; Manami DOI ; Yoshihiro MIYAZAKI ; Kinji FURUYA ; Shoko MOUE ; Tatsuya ODA
Journal of Gastric Cancer 2022;22(3):184-196
Purpose:
Total or proximal gastrectomy of the upper-third early gastric cancer (u-EGC) often causes severe post-gastrectomy syndrome, suggesting that these procedures are extremely invasive for patients without pathologically positive lymph node (LN) metastasis. This study aimed to evaluate the clinical applicability of a stomach function-preserving surgery, local resection (LR), with prophylactic left gastric artery (LGA)-basin dissection (LGA-BD).
Materials and Methods:
The data of patients with u-EGC (pathologically diagnosed as T1) were retrospectively analyzed. Total gastrectomy was performed in 30 patients, proximal gastrectomy in 45, and subtotal gastrectomy in 6; the LN status was evaluated assuming that the patients had already underwent LR + LGA-BD. This procedure was considered feasible in patients without LN metastases or in patients with cancer in the LGA basin. The reproducibility of the results was also evaluated using an external validation dataset.
Results:
Of the 82 eligible patients, 79 (96.3%) were cured after undergoing LR + LGA-BD, 74 (90.2%) were pathologically negative for LN metastases, and 5 (6.1%) had LN metastases, but these findings were only observed in the LGA basin. Similarly, of the 406 eligible tumors in the validation dataset, 396 (97.5%) were potentially curative. Tumors in the lesser curvature, post-endoscopic resection status, and small tumors (<20 mm) were considered to be stronger indicators of LR + LGA-BD as all subpopulation cases met our feasibility criteria.
Conclusions
More than 95% of the patients with u-EGC might be eligible for LR + LGA-BD.This function-preserving procedure may contribute to the development of u-EGC without pathological LN metastases, especially for tumors located at the lesser curvature.