12 results on '"de Roy van Zuidewijn DB"'
Search Results
2. Residual breast tissue after mastectomy: how often and where is it located?
- Author
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Griepsma M, de Roy van Zuidewijn DB, Grond AJ, Siesling S, Groen H, and de Bock GH
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Breast Neoplasms pathology, Carcinoma, Ductal, Breast epidemiology, Carcinoma, Ductal, Breast surgery, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Middle Aged, Neoplasm Staging, Neoplasm, Residual epidemiology, Neoplasm, Residual surgery, Netherlands epidemiology, Prevalence, Prognosis, Breast pathology, Breast Neoplasms surgery, Carcinoma, Ductal, Breast diagnosis, Mastectomy, Neoplasm, Residual diagnosis
- Abstract
Background: Residual breast tissue after a mastectomy can lead to a (second) primary breast cancer. The development of breast cancer after prophylactic mastectomy and the finding of normal breast tissue around a local recurrence support this assumption. The aim of the present study was to investigate the prevalence and localization of residual breast tissue after a mastectomy., Methods: A series of 206 women who underwent a mastectomy between January 2008 and August 2009 in 11 hospitals were enrolled onto this study after written informed consent was obtained. From each mastectomy specimen, a total of 36 samples were obtained from the superficial dissection plane at predetermined locations. The biopsy samples were analyzed for the presence of benign breast tissue in the inked superficial area. Differences in percentage of positive samples were analyzed by generalized estimating equations to account for their interdependence., Results: A total of 7,374 biopsy samples from 206 breast specimens of 206 patients were included in the analysis. In 76.2 % of the specimens (n = 157), one or more positive biopsy samples were found. The positive findings were found diffusely across the superficial dissection surface of the specimen with a significant predilection for the lower outer quadrant and the middle circle of the superficial dissection plane., Conclusions: After a mastectomy, there is a high probability of residual breast tissue. This tissue is predominantly located in the middle circle of the superficial dissection plane and in the lower outer quadrant. Surgeons should be aware of these locations so they may remove as much of the benign breast tissue as possible.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
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3. Patients blue on patent blue: an adverse reaction during four sentinel node procedures.
- Author
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Beenen E and de Roy van Zuidewijn DB
- Subjects
- Aged, Female, Humans, Middle Aged, Retrospective Studies, Anaphylaxis chemically induced, Breast Neoplasms pathology, Coloring Agents adverse effects, Rosaniline Dyes adverse effects, Sentinel Lymph Node Biopsy adverse effects, Urticaria chemically induced
- Abstract
Patent blue V is a well-known dye for visualisation of the lymph nodes in a sentinel lymph node biopsy in breast carcinoma. We present four cases of an adverse reaction to patent blue V, one of which was an anaphylactic shock. The adverse reactions to patent blue and isosulphan blue as found in the literature are discussed and an alternative is suggested.
- Published
- 2005
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4. Aggressive versus conventional strategies in the treatment of rectal adenocarcinoma.
- Author
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Havenga K, Huang Y, Enker WE, Welvaart K, De Roy Van Zuidewijn DB, and Cohen AM
- Subjects
- Adenocarcinoma mortality, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Chemotherapy, Adjuvant, Combined Modality Therapy, Disease-Free Survival, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local, Radiotherapy, Adjuvant, Rectal Neoplasms mortality, Retrospective Studies, Survival Rate, Adenocarcinoma therapy, Rectal Neoplasms therapy
- Abstract
Objective: Comparison of an aggressive approach (including total mesorectal excision and combined modality adjuvant therapy) with a conventional approach in the treatment of primary rectal cancer., Design: Retrospective study., Setting: Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Centre, New York (MSKCC) and University Hospital Leiden, the Netherlands (UHL)., Subjects: One hundred and sixty-nine patients treated at MSKCC and 96 patients treated at UHL., Interventions: Total mesorectal excision (MSKCC) and conventional resection (UHL)., Main Outcome Measures: Overall survival and local recurrence-free survival., Results: Five-year overall survival was 73% for MSKCC patients and 52% for UHL patients (P < 0.001). Five-year local recurrence-free survival was 83% for MSKCC patients and 72% for UHL patients (P=0.001). Relative risk of dying or developing a local recurrence was 3.37 and 2.61, respectively, for patients treated at UHL compared to patients treated at MSKCC (P<0.001 and P=0.008, respectively)., Conclusions: These data suggest that an aggressive approach including total mesorectal excision and combined modality adjuvant therapy improves survival and local control compared to a conventional approach.
- Published
- 1996
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5. Complications of thyroid surgery.
- Author
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de Roy van Zuidewijn DB, Songun I, Kievit J, and van de Velde CJ
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Blood Loss, Surgical, Child, Female, Goiter, Nodular surgery, Graves Disease surgery, Humans, Hypocalcemia etiology, Length of Stay statistics & numerical data, Male, Middle Aged, Netherlands epidemiology, Recurrent Laryngeal Nerve Injuries, Reoperation statistics & numerical data, Retrospective Studies, Thyroid Neoplasms surgery, Thyroidectomy methods, Thyroidectomy statistics & numerical data, Time Factors, Vocal Cord Paralysis etiology, Thyroidectomy adverse effects
- Abstract
Background: The morbidity of thyroid surgery is low. Despite this, some authors advocate a subtotal thyroidectomy instead of a total thyroidectomy, to avoid the higher morbidity associated with a total thyroidectomy., Methods: We retrospectively evaluated the complications of thyroid surgery in Leiden between January 1, 1982 and October 1, 1990. Three hundred forty-one patients--261 women and 80 men--had 356 operations; 15 patients were operated on twice; there were 152 total hemithyroidectomies, 3 subtotal hemithyroidectomies, 33 total thyroidectomies, 122 bilateral subtotal hemithyroidectomies, 12 combinations of total and subtotal hemithyroidectomies, and 34 other operations., Results: Calculated for the nerves at risk (n = 489), the percentage of permanent recurrent nerve lesions was 3.1 (in the 5 most recent years it was 1.2%). There was no significant difference between total or subtotal (hemi)thyroidectomies. Initial symptomatic hypocalcemia necessitating supplementation was encountered 42 times (12.5%). The occurrence of permanent symptomatic hypocalcemia (6%) was not significantly different between total and subtotal (hemi)thyroidectomies (p = 0.06). The duration of surgery was 137.8 min for bilateral subtotal thyroidectomies and 182.9 min for bilateral total thyroidectomies (p < 0.0001). There was no difference in blood loss between total and subtotal (hemi)thyroidectomies., Conclusions: Because total thyroidectomy carries a risk of complications similar to that for subtotal thyroidectomy, it is not logical to avoid total resections. If the number of total resections were increased, it is anticipated that fewer reoperations, which involve a relatively high morbidity rate, would have to be performed.
- Published
- 1995
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6. Preoperative diagnostic tests for operable thyroid disease.
- Author
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de Roy van Zuidewijn DB, Songun I, Hamming J, Kievit J, van de Velde CJ, and Veselic M
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Biopsy, Needle, Humans, Middle Aged, Preoperative Care, Radionuclide Imaging, Sensitivity and Specificity, Thyroid Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Thyroid Neoplasms pathology, Thyroid Neoplasms diagnosis
- Abstract
Although the availability and acceptance of fine-needle aspiration biopsy (FNAB) of thyroid nodules has increased, many physicians still use thyroid scintigraphy for distinguishing benign from malignant lesions. We evaluated these diagnostic tests in 350 patients who had thyroid surgery in our institution between 1977 and 1990. Histologic confirmation of FNAB was obtained in 265 patients. In the group of patients having surgery, 247 thyroid scintigraphies were performed. Our patients were divided into two groups (1977-1986 and 1986-1990). The first group comprised 173 patients with 173 FNABs and 126 scintigrams. The second group consisted of 177 patients having 92 FNABs and 121 scintigrams. Results of scintigrams were analyzed in the second group only. In 5 out of 120 cases where the FNAB result was "benign or probably benign" the lesion appeared to be malignant postoperatively. If the FNAB result was "malignant or probably malignant" (n = 83) the pathology report confirmed a malignancy in 68 cases (81.9%). In 56 instances of all 265 FNABs the cytology report was not conclusive ("uncertain"); in 21.4% of these cases a malignancy was found postoperatively. An FNAB-result "(probably) malignant" had a positive predictive value of 0.819 while the negative predictive value of a result "(probably) benign" is 0.950. An "uncertain" result does not take away our concern so this result should have the same consequences as those of a result "(probably) malignant". In that case, FNAB-sensitivity is 93.0% and specificity 66.1%. Eighty-five of the last 116 scintigraphies showed a solitary node. Eleven of these nodes were hot while 74 were cold.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
- Published
- 1994
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7. Histologic evaluation of wound healing in experimental intestinal anastomoses: effects of antineoplastic agents.
- Author
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de Roy van Zuidewijn DB, Schillings PH, Wobbes T, and de Boer HH
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- Anastomosis, Surgical, Animals, Colon surgery, Granulation Tissue pathology, Ileum surgery, Intestinal Mucosa pathology, Male, Necrosis, Rats, Rats, Inbred Strains, Reproducibility of Results, Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols pharmacology, Colon pathology, Ileum pathology, Wound Healing drug effects
- Abstract
Histologic evaluation of intestinal wound healing with and without cytostatics was performed in 36 rats. Variables were the relative position of the wound edges in mucosa and muscularis, necrosis, exudate, granulation tissue, granulocytes, macrophages, fibroblasts, restoration of the mucosal epithelium, and repair of the muscularis propria. The relative position of the wound edges in the mucosa and the muscularis in the initial phase of wound healing depended on technique but appeared to improve in the later phases of wound healing. It was not affected by the administration of antineoplastic agents; neither were muscularis repair, epithelial restoration of the mucosa, necrosis, nor exudate. Granulation tissue, fibroblasts and macrophages were present in maximal amounts after 7 days appearing later or showing this maximum at a different moment in time when antineoplastic agents were given. The processes of epithelial and muscularis repair were not influenced by the relative position of the wound edges. Granulation tissue, macrophages, and fibroblasts were the best parameters for measuring the histologic evolution of intestinal wound healing, and the effects of antineoplastic agents upon it.
- Published
- 1992
8. Morphometric analysis of the effects of antineoplastic drugs on mucosa of normal ileum and ileal anastomoses in rats.
- Author
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de Roy van Zuidewijn DB, Schillings PH, Wobbes T, Hendriks T, and de Boer HH
- Subjects
- Analysis of Variance, Animals, Bleomycin pharmacology, Cell Division drug effects, Cisplatin pharmacology, Dose-Response Relationship, Drug, Epithelial Cells, Epithelium drug effects, Epithelium physiology, Fluorouracil pharmacology, Granulation Tissue drug effects, Ileum cytology, Intestinal Mucosa cytology, Intestinal Mucosa physiology, Male, Rats, Rats, Inbred Strains, Wound Healing drug effects, Wound Healing physiology, Anastomosis, Surgical, Antineoplastic Agents pharmacology, Ileum drug effects, Ileum surgery, Intestinal Mucosa drug effects
- Abstract
Antineoplastic agents affect the healing of intestinal anastomoses. They often induce anorexia and diarrhea, possibly caused by morphological changes in the small intestinal mucosa. These changes were evaluated in the rat ileum. Animals in group I underwent only intestinal surgery while those in groups II and III underwent surgery on the third day of a 5-day course with cisplatin (in two different doses), bleomycin, and 5-fluorouracil. The parameters were: number of mitoses in crypts, crypt depth, villus height, width, and contour length, measured in the mucosa of primarily resected segments of the ileum and of the anastomotic area. Surgery yields an increased crypt depth and villus length in the anastomotic area without changing villus width. The changes in intestinal crypts precede those in villi. Antineoplastic drugs decrease crypt mitotic rate, villus height, width, and contour length. After cessation of antineoplastic chemotherapy mitotic activity increases. The shallower and shorter villi increase in width and length resulting in an increased villus contour length and area. A linear relation exists between villus contour length and villus height and width. Thus, antineoplastic polychemotherapy, dose-dependently, reduces and surgical trauma increases intestinal proliferative activity. However, the morphologic changes do not unequivocally explain possible metabolic disturbances causing retarded intestinal wound healing.
- Published
- 1992
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9. Cytostatics and anastomotic healing in the intestine: an experimental study on the effect of parenteral nutrition.
- Author
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de Roy van Zuidewijn DB, Hendriks T, Wobbes T, de Man B, and de Boer HH
- Subjects
- Anastomosis, Surgical, Animals, Body Weight drug effects, Colon metabolism, Hydroxyproline analysis, Ileum metabolism, Male, Rats, Rats, Inbred Strains, Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols adverse effects, Colon surgery, Ileum surgery, Parenteral Nutrition, Wound Healing drug effects
- Abstract
The effects of parenteral nutrition on the healing of experimental ileal and colonic anastomoses constructed on the 3rd day of a 5-day cytostatics course were investigated. Intravenous saline alone already reduced weight loss induced by cytostatics while parenteral nutrition almost completely prevented postoperative loss of weight. A negative effect of cytostatics on anastomotic bursting strength was found in the ileum 7 days after operation. Parenteral feeding negated this effect but had no positive effect on anastomotic hydroxyproline content. Thus, parenteral nutrition increases the strength of intestinal anastomoses, constructed during a cytostatics regimen, but intravenous saline alone also appears to have a similar effect.
- Published
- 1992
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10. Intraperitoneal cytostatics impair healing of experimental intestinal anastomoses.
- Author
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de Roy van Zuidewijn DB, Hendriks T, Wobbes T, and de Boer HH
- Subjects
- Anastomosis, Surgical, Animals, Body Weight drug effects, Hydroxyproline analysis, Male, Pressure, Rats, Rats, Inbred Strains, Weight Loss, Bleomycin pharmacology, Cisplatin pharmacology, Colon surgery, Fluorouracil pharmacology, Ileum surgery, Wound Healing drug effects
- Abstract
We investigated the effect of two doses of cytostatics, administered intraperitoneally during 5 consecutive days, on the healing of ileal and colonic anastomoses constructed on the third day. The cytostatics regimen consisted of a combination of 5-fluorouracil, bleomycin and cisplatin at 10, 2 and 0.35 mg kg-1d-1, respectively, or at twice higher doses. The lower dose was similar to that given intravenously in previous experiments. Rats were sacrificed 3 or 7 days after operation. No effects of cytostatics were observed after 3 days, neither on anastomotic bursting pressure nor on hydroxyproline concentration (microgram/mg dry weight) or content (microgram cm-1). Profound effects were seen at 7 days. In the high dose group, bursting pressures in both anastomoses were greatly reduced with respect to the control group. Concurrently, collagen synthesis was severely impaired, as indicated by sustained decreased hydroxyproline concentrations and content. The lower dose of cytostatics showed essentially similar effects on hydroxyproline parameters, but affected anastomotic strength less dramatically. The data indicate that, while intraperitoneal chemotherapy may show less detrimental systemic toxicity and thus allow higher doses, its application as an adjunct to gastrointestinal surgery may be limited because of its severe effects on anastomotic repair.
- Published
- 1991
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11. The effect of antineoplastic agents on the healing of small intestinal anastomoses in the rat.
- Author
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de Roy van Zuidewijn DB, Wobbes T, Hendriks T, Klompmakers AA, and de Boer HM
- Subjects
- Animals, Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols administration & dosage, Bleomycin administration & dosage, Cisplatin administration & dosage, Combined Modality Therapy, Fluorouracil administration & dosage, Hydroxyproline metabolism, Ileum drug effects, Intestine, Small metabolism, Intestine, Small surgery, Male, Rats, Rats, Inbred Strains, Tensile Strength drug effects, Time Factors, Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols pharmacology, Intestine, Small drug effects, Wound Healing drug effects
- Abstract
The influence of an intravenous 5-day combined chemotherapy with bleomycin (2 mg/kg/d), 5-fluorouracil (10 mg/kg/d) and cis-diamminedichloroplatinum (0.35 mg/kg/d) on the healing of ileal anastomoses was investigated in rats. Ninety-six male Wistar rats were used, divided into four groups. The rats in the control group had surgery without administration of cytostatic agents. The other rats were operated either 2 days after, 2 days before, or during the 5-day chemotherapy course. In each group, rats were killed after 3, 7, and 21 days. Anastomotic healing was assessed by measurement of bursting pressures and hydroxyproline levels. Intestinal healing appeared to be impaired most if the operation was performed in the middle of the antineoplastic chemotherapy course. The effects were most pronounced on the seventh postoperative day. Surgery on the second day after the chemotherapy course led to a slight and early delay in wound healing as measured by the hydroxyproline content. Seven days postoperatively, concentrations had returned to preoperative values. Surgery 2 days before chemotherapy induced only minor differences with respect to the control group. In all groups, bursting pressure and hydroxyproline content at 21 days were similar. Thus, antineoplastic agents retard but do not prevent healing of intestinal anastomoses. The effects are most pronounced when surgery is performed during chemotherapy. If possible, surgery should be performed prior to chemotherapy. Increasing the time interval between surgery and chemotherapy may decrease the delay in intestinal woundhealing.
- Published
- 1986
- Full Text
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12. Healing of experimental colonic anastomoses: effect of antineoplastic agents.
- Author
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de Roy van Zuidewijn DB, Hendriks T, Wobbes T, Klompmakers AA, and de Boer HH
- Subjects
- Animals, Bleomycin administration & dosage, Body Weight drug effects, Cisplatin administration & dosage, Colon drug effects, Colon metabolism, Colon physiopathology, Drug Evaluation, Preclinical, Fluorouracil administration & dosage, Hydroxyproline metabolism, Leukocytes drug effects, Male, Pressure, Rats, Rats, Inbred Strains, Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols therapeutic use, Colon surgery, Wound Healing drug effects
- Abstract
The effect of a combination of antineoplastic agents (bleomycin (2 mg/kg/d), 5-fluorouracil (10 mg/kg/d) and cisdiamminedichloroplatinum (0.35 mg/kg/d)), given intravenously, on the healing of colonic anastomoses was investigated in rats. Ninety-six male Wistar rats were divided into four groups. A control group of rats underwent surgery only. The remaining rats were operated either 2 days before, 2 days after or during the 5-day chemotherapy course. In all groups rats were killed after 3, 7 and 21 days. Wound healing of the anastomosis was assessed by measuring the bursting pressures and hydroxyproline contents. Operating in the middle of the 5-day chemotherapy course had the greatest effect on anastomotic healing. This was most apparent on the seventh day postoperatively. When surgery was performed on the second day after the chemotherapy course there was an early delay in wound healing as measured by hydroxyproline content. Seven days postoperatively concentrations were in the same range as those in the control group. Chemotherapy commencing 2 days after surgery did not affect anastomotic healing as compared to the control group. Bursting pressure and hydroxyproline content at the end of the experiment were more or less comparable in all groups.
- Published
- 1987
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