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Surgical Versus Sequential Hybrid Treatment of Carotid Body Tumors

Carotid body tumor (CBT) are slow-growing tumors that develop in the cervical region at the carotid bifurcation. . In a randomized study, 33 patients were treated for CBT excision: 10 patients performed preoperative embolization (PE) and 23 were treated only by isolated traditional surgery (N-PE). T...

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Autores principales: Amato, Bruno, Compagna, Rita, Florio, Anna, Calemma, Francesca, Rocca, Aldo, Salzano, Francesco, Brongo, Sergio, Gasbarro, Vincenzo, Aprea, Giovanni
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: De Gruyter 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6947761/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31934642
http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/med-2019-0115
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author Amato, Bruno
Compagna, Rita
Florio, Anna
Calemma, Francesca
Rocca, Aldo
Salzano, Francesco
Brongo, Sergio
Gasbarro, Vincenzo
Aprea, Giovanni
author_facet Amato, Bruno
Compagna, Rita
Florio, Anna
Calemma, Francesca
Rocca, Aldo
Salzano, Francesco
Brongo, Sergio
Gasbarro, Vincenzo
Aprea, Giovanni
author_sort Amato, Bruno
collection PubMed
description Carotid body tumor (CBT) are slow-growing tumors that develop in the cervical region at the carotid bifurcation. . In a randomized study, 33 patients were treated for CBT excision: 10 patients performed preoperative embolization (PE) and 23 were treated only by isolated traditional surgery (N-PE). The first group includes patients undergoing preoperative embolization. The second group of patients (N-PE) included 11 males and 12 females. Intraoperative complications were lower in patients treated with a hybrid procedure (PE): sections of the cranial nerves were recorded in 7% of cases compared to 12% of the surgical procedure (P-value = 0.72); while the reversible nerve lesions (P value = 0.21) and the permanent ones (P value = 0.46), were instead similar in both procedures. The comparative blood loss during the operative procedure shows a P-value of 0.02. Operating times, reversible damage of the cranial nerves , incidence of stroke (0% vs1%, P value> 0.99) and post-operative hospital stay (4.1 vs. 4.2 days, P value = 0.91) did not show differences in the two groups of patients. The analysis of the results detects pre-operative embolization of CBT in reducing intraoperative blood loss and resection of the cranial nerves..
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spelling pubmed-69477612020-01-13 Surgical Versus Sequential Hybrid Treatment of Carotid Body Tumors Amato, Bruno Compagna, Rita Florio, Anna Calemma, Francesca Rocca, Aldo Salzano, Francesco Brongo, Sergio Gasbarro, Vincenzo Aprea, Giovanni Open Med (Wars) Research Article Carotid body tumor (CBT) are slow-growing tumors that develop in the cervical region at the carotid bifurcation. . In a randomized study, 33 patients were treated for CBT excision: 10 patients performed preoperative embolization (PE) and 23 were treated only by isolated traditional surgery (N-PE). The first group includes patients undergoing preoperative embolization. The second group of patients (N-PE) included 11 males and 12 females. Intraoperative complications were lower in patients treated with a hybrid procedure (PE): sections of the cranial nerves were recorded in 7% of cases compared to 12% of the surgical procedure (P-value = 0.72); while the reversible nerve lesions (P value = 0.21) and the permanent ones (P value = 0.46), were instead similar in both procedures. The comparative blood loss during the operative procedure shows a P-value of 0.02. Operating times, reversible damage of the cranial nerves , incidence of stroke (0% vs1%, P value> 0.99) and post-operative hospital stay (4.1 vs. 4.2 days, P value = 0.91) did not show differences in the two groups of patients. The analysis of the results detects pre-operative embolization of CBT in reducing intraoperative blood loss and resection of the cranial nerves.. De Gruyter 2019-12-26 /pmc/articles/PMC6947761/ /pubmed/31934642 http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/med-2019-0115 Text en © 2019 Bruno Amato et al., published by De Gruyter http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0 This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 Public License.
spellingShingle Research Article
Amato, Bruno
Compagna, Rita
Florio, Anna
Calemma, Francesca
Rocca, Aldo
Salzano, Francesco
Brongo, Sergio
Gasbarro, Vincenzo
Aprea, Giovanni
Surgical Versus Sequential Hybrid Treatment of Carotid Body Tumors
title Surgical Versus Sequential Hybrid Treatment of Carotid Body Tumors
title_full Surgical Versus Sequential Hybrid Treatment of Carotid Body Tumors
title_fullStr Surgical Versus Sequential Hybrid Treatment of Carotid Body Tumors
title_full_unstemmed Surgical Versus Sequential Hybrid Treatment of Carotid Body Tumors
title_short Surgical Versus Sequential Hybrid Treatment of Carotid Body Tumors
title_sort surgical versus sequential hybrid treatment of carotid body tumors
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6947761/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31934642
http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/med-2019-0115
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