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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: cancer + esophagectomy + esophagus  Related to the article below (Last Update: 12/1/2008)

 News results: Standard Version | Text Version | Image Version Results 1 - 2 of about 3 for cancer esophagectomy esophagus. (0.29 seconds) 
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Proteo, Inc./Proteo Biotech AG: Start of the Phase II clinical ...
MarketWatch - Nov 17, 2008
Fred FAnndrich, Department of General and Thoracic Surgery, University of Kiel: "The removal of the esophagus for esophageal cancer is a very invasive ...OTC:PTEO
StandoutStocks.com: "Stocks that Standout" picks for today are ...
Trading Markets (press release), CA - Nov 17, 2008
Fred FAnndrich, Department of General and Thoracic Surgery, University of Kiel: "The removal of the esophagus for esophageal cancer is a very invasive ...OTC:CADM - OTC:PRVH - PINK:PRPM
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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: 0.29 + 18,400 + web  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/7/2008)

Marsulex announces strong second quarter 2008 results
Canada NewsWire (press release), Canada - Jul 30, 2008
... term Loan(1) 966 2041 2195 2361 2540 24034 34137 Senior Secured Credit Facility(2), - - 18400 20700 82805 - 121905 Interest on loans(2) 3144 7420 6961 ...TSE:MLX
Source: Google News

[PDF] … Accumulation of Polychlorinated Biphenyl Congeners in the Terrestrial Food Web of the Kalamazoo … -
AL Blankenship, MJ Zwiernik, KK Coady, DP Kay, JL … - Environmental Science & Technology, 2005 - msu.edu
Differential Accumulation of Polychlorinated Biphenyl Congeners in the Terrestrial
Food Web of the ... This study focused on two locations for food web analysis. ...

Web-Assisted Detection and Correction of Joint and Disjoint Malapropos Word Combinations -
IA Bolshakov, SN Galicia-Haro - Natural Language Processing and Information Systems: 10th …, 2005 - Springer
... The problem of the Web statistics validity for collocation testing deserves to be
investigated deeper, but for this paper it ... 18400 0.11 2024 ... 34600 0.29 10030 ...

Heavy metal concentrations in feathers of common loons (Gavia immer) in the Northeastern United … -
J Burger, M Pokras, R Chafel, M Gochfeld - Environmental Monitoring and Assessment, 1994 - Springer
... Mercury 20245 4- 2512 (18400) 9677 4- 1660 (8000) 9.1 ... for lead and cadmium (Kendall
7- = 0.29, N -- 28 ... to acidification of lakes and disruption of the food web. ...

[PDF] Infrared Brightness Temperature of Mars, 1983-2103 -
EL Wright - Arxiv preprint astro-ph/0703640, 2007 - arxiv.org
... 0.1, the solar flux at 1 AU is 1367 W/m 2 , and the albedo is A = 0.29. ... This paper
will be a Web-only manuscript, available at http://arXiv.org and its mirrors ...

Dramatic Effects of the Substituents on the Solid-state Fluorescence Properties of Structural … -
Y Ooyama, Y Harima - Chemistry Letters, 2006 - J-STAGE
... 3c Cyclohexane 471(18400), 439(21200) 515, 482 0.99 11 416 ... E 1=2 ) of these compounds
are 0.29?0.33, 0.80 ... Published on the web (Advance View) July 8, 2006; doi ...

Evaluation of daylight simulators. Part 2; Assessment of the quality of daylight simulators using … -
H Xu, MR Luo, B Rigg - Coloration Technology, 2003 - Blackwell Synergy
? Color. Technol., 119 (2003) 253 Web ref: 20030501 Coloration Technology ... Page 2.
254 ? Color. Technol., 119 (2003) Web ref: 20030501 ultraviolet bands. ...

[DOC] A Method for Analyzing Congestion in Pareto and Related Queues
MJ Fisher, CM Harris - The Telecommunication Review, 1999 - noblis.org
... First,, 3.5, 3300, 0.2, 0.5, 0.590, 0.29, 0.29. ... 3.5, 18400, 0.375, 0.94, 0.960, 9.17,
8.88. ... ME and A. Bestavros, ?Self-Similarity In The World Wide Web Traffic ? ...

Anti-malarial activity of N6-modified purine analogues -
K Too, DM Brown, E Bongard, V Yardley, L Vivas, D … - Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry, 2007 - Elsevier
... Several of the analogues were active in the low micromolar range (Table 2) with
4b possessing the highest potency (IC 50 0.29 ?M) against the highly multi-drug ...

[PDF] INTERMEDIATE STEPS TOWARDS THE 2000-WATT SOCIETY IN SWITZERLAND: AN ENERGY-ECONOMIC SCENARIO … -
ETH Z?RICH - 2007 - eem.web.psi.ch
Page 1. DISS. ETH NO. 17314 INTERMEDIATE STEPS TOWARDS THE 2000- WATT SOCIETY IN
SWITZERLAND: AN ENERGY-ECONOMIC SCENARIO ANALYSIS A dissertation submitted to ...

[PDF] Winter population structure and feeding of the chaetognath Eukrohnia hamata and the copepod Euchaeta … -
V Oresland - Marine ecology progress series. Oldendorf, 1995 - int-res.com
... including ice algae production), zooplankton feeding and reproduction, as well as
in food web dynamics, should ... Mean NPC 0 08 0.29 0.91 0 81 0.12 0.86 2.43 2.39 ...
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Source: Google Scholar
 
 

Cancer of the esophagus may benefit from laparoscopic esophagectomy

Surgeons at the Oregon Health & Science University Digestive Health Center have developed a new technique that makes feasible and safe a potentially lifesaving and noninvasive surgical procedure known as laparoscopic esophagectomy.
Until now, the procedure was considered too technically demanding for most surgeons to perform.

 
For more than a decade, the original procedure has been used in a few specialized centers around the world to remove cancer as well as other diseased tissue of the esophagus laparoscopically, that is by inserting fiber-optic instruments into a small, quarter-sized incision in the abdomen and maneuvering them to the affected portion of the esophagus while observing with a camera.

When first introduced, the less invasive laparoscopic esophagectomy was embraced by surgeons eager to forgo traditional open surgery, which requires cutting through the patient's chest. But it proved so difficult and time-consuming that most surgeons abandoned it, according to John G. Hunter, M.D., co-director of the OHSU Digestive Health Center.

Hunter, however, did not abandon it. He knew from experience that laparoscopic surgery is inherently better for patients. " They recover faster with less pain, fewer complications and smaller scars," he explained.

He and colleagues worked in earnest to develop a means by which they could more easily and safely perform laparoscopic esophagectomies. The fruit of that labor is the laparoscopic inversion esophagectomy, or LIE. The LIE eliminates some of the technical obstacles that plagued the original procedure, the researchers report.

" With the original laparoscopic esophagectomy, the entire esophagus is in the way as you try to take it out, and all access is from behind, making it difficult to see surrounding structures and blood vessels. Space is tight," said Blair Jobe, at OHSU School of Medicine, Portland Veterans Affairs Medical Center ( PVAMC ).

" With LIE, we roll up the esophagus from the bottom, section by section, into the neck. The technique is similar to taking off a sock, rolling it down from the outside in. This opens the surrounding space, making it easier and safer to cut attachments and tissue as you go."

The researchers state that LIE has proved effective in removing precancerous tissue as well as other noncancerous esophageal disease with fewer complications than the original laparoscopic esophagectomy. In addition, they explain, the survival rate with LIE may be greater than that of traditional open surgery.

. The National Cancer Institute estimates 13,200 Americans will be diagnosed with esophageal cancer this year and 12,500 will die of the malignancy. Of the new cases, 9,200 will occur in men and 3,100 will occur in women.

An estimated 25 million Americans have some form of esophageal disease, the most common of which is gastroesophageal reflux disease ( GERD ). Patients with severe GERD have a 40 times greater risk of developing esophageal cancer than those without GERD symptoms, similar to the risk of developing lung cancer for a cigarette smoker. However, for any one particular individual with GERD, the risk of esophageal cancers is quite low.

There are two main types of esophageal cancer: squamous cell cancer and adenocarcinoma of the esophagus.
Adenocaricinoma is the most common and is increasing in frequency. It is associated with GERD, which affects some 61 million Americans, according to the American Gastroenterological Association.
If left untreated, over time, GERD can change the cells in the esophageal lining, a condition called Barrett's esophagus, which can lead to adenocarcinoma.
Squamous cell cancer of the esophagus is linked to cigarette smoking and excessive alcohol consumption. Its incidence is not increasing in frequency.

Source: Oregon Health & Science University, 2005
 
 
 
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