Isolated Liver Perfusion for Hepatic Tumors [electronic resource] /

The contributions in this book were originally presented at the workshop "Research and Clinical Application of Isolated Liver Perfusion for Hepatic Tumors" held on 28 February to 1 March 1997 in Hanover, Germany. The workshop was planned to bring together groups working with isolated liver perfusion techniques worldwide. Experts from various countries were invited to pre­ sent and discuss their experimental data and clinical results. USA par­ Groups from Japan, The Netherlands, Sweden and the ticipated. At the beginning, oncologists, surgeons and patholo­ gists presented possible indications and the oncological back­ ground for therapeutic isolated liver perfusion from their points of view. Based on data from previous studies about loco regional chemotherapy and based on the pathology of metastasis, it could be concluded that there is a place for isolated liver perfusion in the therapy of liver cancer. Second, different surgical techniques of isolated liver perfusion were presented. These techniques var­ ied from a percutaneous approach with extracorporeal chemofil­ tration to extended open abdominal surgery. Perfusion of the liv­ er without a considerable amount of drug reaching the systemic circulation proved to be possible. The complex procedure with complicated extracorporeal perfusion technique represented a disadvantage of the methods presented. Further studies should simplify the technical and surgical aspects. Intraoperative and postoperative management of . patients undergoing isolated liver perfusion were also discussed. Coagulopathy was one important aspect which can occur during isolated liver perfusion. The per­ centage of leakage determined systemic side effects.

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Main Authors: Oldhafer, Karl J. editor., Lang, Hauke. editor., Pichlmayr, Rudolf. editor., SpringerLink (Online service)
Format: Texto biblioteca
Language:eng
Published: Berlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 1998
Subjects:Medicine., Radiology., Oncology., Medicine & Public Health., Imaging / Radiology.,
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-80460-1
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id KOHA-OAI-TEST:171335
record_format koha
institution COLPOS
collection Koha
country México
countrycode MX
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
En linea
databasecode cat-colpos
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Departamento de documentación y biblioteca de COLPOS
language eng
topic Medicine.
Radiology.
Oncology.
Medicine & Public Health.
Oncology.
Imaging / Radiology.
Medicine.
Radiology.
Oncology.
Medicine & Public Health.
Oncology.
Imaging / Radiology.
spellingShingle Medicine.
Radiology.
Oncology.
Medicine & Public Health.
Oncology.
Imaging / Radiology.
Medicine.
Radiology.
Oncology.
Medicine & Public Health.
Oncology.
Imaging / Radiology.
Oldhafer, Karl J. editor.
Lang, Hauke. editor.
Pichlmayr, Rudolf. editor.
SpringerLink (Online service)
Isolated Liver Perfusion for Hepatic Tumors [electronic resource] /
description The contributions in this book were originally presented at the workshop "Research and Clinical Application of Isolated Liver Perfusion for Hepatic Tumors" held on 28 February to 1 March 1997 in Hanover, Germany. The workshop was planned to bring together groups working with isolated liver perfusion techniques worldwide. Experts from various countries were invited to pre­ sent and discuss their experimental data and clinical results. USA par­ Groups from Japan, The Netherlands, Sweden and the ticipated. At the beginning, oncologists, surgeons and patholo­ gists presented possible indications and the oncological back­ ground for therapeutic isolated liver perfusion from their points of view. Based on data from previous studies about loco regional chemotherapy and based on the pathology of metastasis, it could be concluded that there is a place for isolated liver perfusion in the therapy of liver cancer. Second, different surgical techniques of isolated liver perfusion were presented. These techniques var­ ied from a percutaneous approach with extracorporeal chemofil­ tration to extended open abdominal surgery. Perfusion of the liv­ er without a considerable amount of drug reaching the systemic circulation proved to be possible. The complex procedure with complicated extracorporeal perfusion technique represented a disadvantage of the methods presented. Further studies should simplify the technical and surgical aspects. Intraoperative and postoperative management of . patients undergoing isolated liver perfusion were also discussed. Coagulopathy was one important aspect which can occur during isolated liver perfusion. The per­ centage of leakage determined systemic side effects.
format Texto
topic_facet Medicine.
Radiology.
Oncology.
Medicine & Public Health.
Oncology.
Imaging / Radiology.
author Oldhafer, Karl J. editor.
Lang, Hauke. editor.
Pichlmayr, Rudolf. editor.
SpringerLink (Online service)
author_facet Oldhafer, Karl J. editor.
Lang, Hauke. editor.
Pichlmayr, Rudolf. editor.
SpringerLink (Online service)
author_sort Oldhafer, Karl J. editor.
title Isolated Liver Perfusion for Hepatic Tumors [electronic resource] /
title_short Isolated Liver Perfusion for Hepatic Tumors [electronic resource] /
title_full Isolated Liver Perfusion for Hepatic Tumors [electronic resource] /
title_fullStr Isolated Liver Perfusion for Hepatic Tumors [electronic resource] /
title_full_unstemmed Isolated Liver Perfusion for Hepatic Tumors [electronic resource] /
title_sort isolated liver perfusion for hepatic tumors [electronic resource] /
publisher Berlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg,
publishDate 1998
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-80460-1
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AT langhaukeeditor isolatedliverperfusionforhepatictumorselectronicresource
AT pichlmayrrudolfeditor isolatedliverperfusionforhepatictumorselectronicresource
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spelling KOHA-OAI-TEST:1713352018-07-30T22:48:13ZIsolated Liver Perfusion for Hepatic Tumors [electronic resource] / Oldhafer, Karl J. editor. Lang, Hauke. editor. Pichlmayr, Rudolf. editor. SpringerLink (Online service) textBerlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg,1998.engThe contributions in this book were originally presented at the workshop "Research and Clinical Application of Isolated Liver Perfusion for Hepatic Tumors" held on 28 February to 1 March 1997 in Hanover, Germany. The workshop was planned to bring together groups working with isolated liver perfusion techniques worldwide. Experts from various countries were invited to pre­ sent and discuss their experimental data and clinical results. USA par­ Groups from Japan, The Netherlands, Sweden and the ticipated. At the beginning, oncologists, surgeons and patholo­ gists presented possible indications and the oncological back­ ground for therapeutic isolated liver perfusion from their points of view. Based on data from previous studies about loco regional chemotherapy and based on the pathology of metastasis, it could be concluded that there is a place for isolated liver perfusion in the therapy of liver cancer. Second, different surgical techniques of isolated liver perfusion were presented. These techniques var­ ied from a percutaneous approach with extracorporeal chemofil­ tration to extended open abdominal surgery. Perfusion of the liv­ er without a considerable amount of drug reaching the systemic circulation proved to be possible. The complex procedure with complicated extracorporeal perfusion technique represented a disadvantage of the methods presented. Further studies should simplify the technical and surgical aspects. Intraoperative and postoperative management of . patients undergoing isolated liver perfusion were also discussed. Coagulopathy was one important aspect which can occur during isolated liver perfusion. The per­ centage of leakage determined systemic side effects.I. Indication -- Are There Indications for Intraarterial Hepatic Chemotherapy or Isolated Liver Perfusion? The Case of Liver Metastases from Colorectal Cancer -- Indications for Isolated Hyperthermic Liver Perfusion: A Surgeon’s View -- II. Technique/Anaesthesia -- Asanguineous Isolated Hyperthermic Perfusion of the Liver: Results of an Experimental Study in Pigs -- Hyperthermo-Chemo-Hypoxic Isolated Liver Perfusion for Hepatic Metastases: A Possible Adjuvant Approach -- The Surgical Technique of Isolated Hyperthermic Arterial Liver Perfusion in Humans -- Monitoring Leakage During Isolated Hepatic Perfusion -- Anesthesiological Management During Isolated Liver Perfusion -- III. High-Dose Chemoperfusion -- Percutaneous Isolated Liver Chemoperfusion for Treatment of Unresectable Malignant Liver Tumors: Technique, Pharmacokinetics, Clinical Results -- Phase l/ll Studies of Isolated Hepatic Perfusion with Mitomycin C or Melphalan in Patients with Colorectal Cancer Hepatic Metastases -- IV. Tumor Necrosis Factor -- Molecular Mechanisms of TNF Receptor-Mediated Signaling -- Isolated Hepatic Perfusion with Tumor Necrosis Factor a and Melphalan: Experimental Studies in Pigs and Phase I Data from Humans -- Isolated Hepatic Perfusion with Extracorporeal Oxygenation Using Hyperthermia, TNF a and Melphalan: Swedish Experience -- V. Radiological Control of Tumor Response -- Role of Ultrasonography for Monitoring Tumor Necrosis After Chemotherapy -- CT and MR to Assess the Response of Liver Tumors to Hepatic Perfusion -- VI. Future Aspects -- Implications of Heat Shock Proteins During Liver Surgery and Liver Perfusion -- Towards Gene Therapy for Colorectal Liver Metastases.The contributions in this book were originally presented at the workshop "Research and Clinical Application of Isolated Liver Perfusion for Hepatic Tumors" held on 28 February to 1 March 1997 in Hanover, Germany. The workshop was planned to bring together groups working with isolated liver perfusion techniques worldwide. Experts from various countries were invited to pre­ sent and discuss their experimental data and clinical results. USA par­ Groups from Japan, The Netherlands, Sweden and the ticipated. At the beginning, oncologists, surgeons and patholo­ gists presented possible indications and the oncological back­ ground for therapeutic isolated liver perfusion from their points of view. Based on data from previous studies about loco regional chemotherapy and based on the pathology of metastasis, it could be concluded that there is a place for isolated liver perfusion in the therapy of liver cancer. Second, different surgical techniques of isolated liver perfusion were presented. These techniques var­ ied from a percutaneous approach with extracorporeal chemofil­ tration to extended open abdominal surgery. Perfusion of the liv­ er without a considerable amount of drug reaching the systemic circulation proved to be possible. The complex procedure with complicated extracorporeal perfusion technique represented a disadvantage of the methods presented. Further studies should simplify the technical and surgical aspects. Intraoperative and postoperative management of . patients undergoing isolated liver perfusion were also discussed. Coagulopathy was one important aspect which can occur during isolated liver perfusion. The per­ centage of leakage determined systemic side effects.Medicine.Radiology.Oncology.Medicine & Public Health.Oncology.Imaging / Radiology.Springer eBookshttp://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-80460-1URN:ISBN:9783642804601