Buschskytte8981
Paclitaxel, a chemotherapeutic agent, is routinely administered for the treatment of various solid organ malignancies. In rare instances, patients receiving infusions of paclitaxel may present with signs of an acute abdomen. Ischemia and necrosis of the bowel wall from chemotherapy-induced neutropenia and direct toxic effects of the drug have been implicated as the cause. We present a case of necrotizing small and large bowel perforation in a patient with breast cancer, 2 weeks after paclitaxel administration.Bouveret syndrome is a form of gallstone ileus and a rare complication of chole(cysto)lithiasis. It describes gastric outlet obstruction secondary to an impacted gallstone. Here, we report a case of an 82-year-old female patient with gastric outlet obstruction and penetration of gallstones into the duodenal bulb on endoscopic imaging. Based on these findings Bouveret syndrome was diagnosed and confirmed by computed tomography.Intersigmoid hernia is a rare clinical entity. Only 6 cases of laparoscopic repair for intersigmoid hernia have been reported since 1977. We herein report such a case, which was successfully diagnosed preoperatively and treated with laparoscopic repair. A 50-year-old man with a chief complaint of abdominal pain and vomiting was admitted for the treatment of small bowel obstruction. The patient had no history of abdominal surgery. Computed tomography showed a dilated small bowel and a closed loop of small bowel dorsal to the sigmoid colon and the sigmoid mesocolon. With a diagnosis of an incarcerated internal hernia, the patient underwent emergency laparoscopy-assisted surgery. Laparoscopy showed that the ileum had herniated into the intersigmoid fossa, and therefore the patient was diagnosed with an intersigmoid hernia. Because bowel ischemia was not observed, we reduced the incarcerated small bowel, and the hernial defect was widely opened. After operation, the patient developed ileus and was treated with transnasal ileus tube. Thereafter, the patient made a satisfactory recovery and was discharged on postoperative day 21. The patient is in good general condition without ileus 42 months postoperatively.We report a case of eosinophilic cholecystitis associated with eosinophilic granulomatosis with polyangiitis (EGPA) complicated by cerebral hemorrhage. A 60-year-old man presented to a local hospital with a diagnosis of acute cholecystitis, with persistent fever and epigastric pain for 2 weeks. His symptoms persisted despite 3-week hospitalization; therefore, he was transferred to our hospital for further evaluation. Laboratory investigations upon admission showed white blood cells 26,300/µL and significant eosinophilia (eosinophils 61%). Abdominal computed tomography revealed no gallbladder enlargement but a circumferentially edematous gallbladder wall. Additional blood test results were negative for antineutrophil cytoplasmic and perinuclear antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies; however, immunoglobulin (Ig)G and IgE levels were high at 1,953 mg/dL and 3,040/IU/mL, respectively. He improved following endoscopic transnasal gallbladder drainage for cholecystitis and was diagnosed with EGPA and received corticosteroid and immunosuppressant combination therapy. The eosinophil count decreased immediately after treatment, and abdominal pain and numbness resolved. He returned with left-sided suboccipital hemorrhage likely attributed to EGPA 6 months after discharge. EGPA is characterized by inflammation of small blood vessels and clinically manifests with an allergic presentation of bronchial asthma, as well as renal dysfunction, interstitial pneumonia, enteritis, and cerebral hemorrhage. Few reports have described cholecystitis as a presenting symptom of EGPA. We report a rare case of such a presentation with added considerations.Combined hepatocellular-cholangiocarcinoma (cHCC/CCA) represents a rare type of primary liver cancer with a very limited prognosis. https://www.selleckchem.com/products/isoxazole-9-isx-9.html Although just recently genomic studies have contributed to a better understanding of the disease's genetic landscape, therapeutic options, especially for advanced-stage patients, are limited and often experimental, as no standardized treatment protocols have been established to date. Here, we report the case of a 38-year-old male patient who was diagnosed with extensive intrahepatic cHCC/CCA in an otherwise healthy liver without signs of chronic liver disease. An interdisciplinary stepwise therapeutic approach including locoregional liver-targeted therapy, systemic chemotherapy, liver transplantation, surgical pulmonary metastasis resection, and next-generation sequencing-based targeted therapy led to a prolonged overall survival beyond 5 years with an excellent quality of life. This case report comprises several provocative treatment decisions that are extensively discussed in light of the existing literature on this rare but highly aggressive malignancy.Pseudoachalasia, also known as secondary achalasia, is a rare clinical condition mimicking idiopathic achalasia but unrelated to primary loss of nitrergic innervation. It has mostly been attributed to malignancy infiltrating the oesophageal wall, but several other benign underlying pathologies have been reported. Because of similar manometric appearance, high-resolution manometry (HRM) of the oesophagus alone cannot distinguish between idiopathic achalasia and pseudoachalasia. Misdiagnosis can result in ineffective treatment by dilatation or even more invasive therapy. This is the first case-report of pseudoachalasia secondary to oesophageal deviation resulting from mediastinal shift and left atrial enlargement following prior left lower lobectomy. HRM, the gold standard for the diagnosis of achalasia, confirmed the incomplete relaxation of the lower oesophageal sphincter (LES) in absence of normal oesophageal peristalsis. However, additional workup with CAT scan and cardiac ultrasound identified an anatomical shift by the extrinsic mass effect resulting from the atrial enlargement, but without contrast retention at the LES.Recurrent laryngeal palsy occurs after No. 106 rec RL lymphadenectomy procedure, which is assumed to cause postoperative respiratory complications. A 71-year-old Japanese man with T1b N0 M0 stage 1 esophageal cancer was scheduled for thoracoscopic esophagectomy with two-field lymph node dissection using nerve integrity monitoring (NIM). The patient demonstrated an uneventful postoperative course with 56 days remission. Under general anesthesia conditions, a single-lumen intubation tube was inserted for NIM. The automatic periodic stimulation electrode was placed on the bilateral vagus nerves on the left and right, respectively. The NIM had set and enabled the identification of the nerve accurately and continuous intraoperative nerve monitoring using impulses from the stimulation probe. The postoperative outcomes and comparison of the potential amplitudes of electromyography were observed while no postoperative vocal cord paresis was present. Combined intraoperative identification and monitoring of recurrent laryngeal nerve significantly changes the quality of the lymphadenectomy procedure and is a promising optical imaging technique.