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This is a multi-author book on hilar cholangiocarcinoma, written by an international team of world-renowned experts covering topics in their respective areas of expertise. There are altogether 71 authors from 14 countries/regions, mainly Argentina, Australia, China, Germany, Italy, Japan, Korea, Malaysia, Thailand, the Netherlands, the United Kingdom and the United States of America. This book aims to provide an up-to-date, fully referenced text that is as succinct as possible, but as comprehensive as necessary, addressing all topics in hilar cholangiocarcinoma. It provides the latest findings in the rapidly advancing field of hilar cholangiocarcinoma. Controversial aspects are discussed by highly regarded authorities who look at the problem from different perspectives. A helpful list of references is included at the end of each chapter. The extensive use of diagrams, figures and tables makes the text easy to read. This book is primarily intended for clinicians and researchers who are interested in hilar cholangiocarcinoma, including liver surgeons, hepatologists, interventional and diagnostic radiologists, and basic researchers. General physicians, general surgeons, trainees, epidemiologists, hospital administrators, pathologists and instrument manufacturers will also find this book to be a valuable reference work. Editor Lau is currently a Professor of Surgery at the Chinese University of Hong Kong, and an Academician of Chinese Academy of Sciences, China.
Diffusion magnetic resonance imaging. --- Surgery & Anesthesiology --- Health & Biological Sciences --- Surgery - General and By Type --- Liver --- Liver metastasis. --- Tumors. --- Cancer. --- Hepatocellular carcinoma --- Hepatic metastasis --- Medicine. --- Hepatology. --- Surgery. --- Surgical oncology. --- Medicine & Public Health. --- Surgical Oncology. --- Cancer --- Oncologic surgery --- Oncological surgery --- Surgical oncology --- Surgery, Primitive --- Medicine --- Gastroenterology --- Clinical sciences --- Medical profession --- Human biology --- Life sciences --- Medical sciences --- Pathology --- Physicians --- Excision --- Treatment --- Metastasis --- Clinical medicine. --- Medicine, Clinical
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This book offers a complete overview on noncolorectal nonneuroendocrine (NCRNNE) liver metastases and describes in detail the currently available therapies. Each chapter focuses on the treatment of metastases from a particular primary malignancy and also provides valuable information on incidence, natural history, and diagnosis. NCRNNE metastases to the liver are rare entities compared with colorectal and neuroendocrine metastases, for which the treatments are well codified. While more publications have appeared on the topic in recent years, an in-depth study has to date been lacking. Furthermore, most published series are insufficiently comparable as they comprise patients with NCRNNE hepatic metastases from a variety of primary malignancies and consequently overlook differences in tumor behavior, frequency of isolated hepatic metastases, response to neoadjuvant or adjuvant therapy, and interval between diagnosis of the primary tumor and the liver metastases. This book, with its more specific approach, will serve not only as an up-to-date guide to diagnosis and treatment but also as a reference on which to base future studies.
Medicine & Public Health. --- Surgical Oncology. --- Minimally Invasive Surgery. --- Surgery. --- Oncology. --- Neurosurgery. --- Endocrinology. --- Medicine. --- Cancer --- Endoscopic surgery. --- Médecine --- Endocrinologie --- Cancérologie --- Chirurgie --- Chirurgie endoscopique --- Liver metastasis. --- Surgery & Anesthesiology --- Health & Biological Sciences --- Surgery - General and By Type --- Liver metastasis --- Treatment. --- Hepatic metastasis --- Minimally invasive surgery. --- Surgical oncology. --- Liver --- Metastasis --- Oncology . --- Nerves --- Neurosurgery --- Internal medicine --- Hormones --- Tumors --- Surgery, Primitive --- Medicine --- Endosurgery --- Minimal access surgery --- Minimally invasive surgery --- MIS (Minimally invasive surgery) --- Operative endoscopy --- Surgical endoscopy --- Endoscopy --- Microsurgery --- Surgery, Operative --- Oncologic surgery --- Oncological surgery --- Surgical oncology --- Surgery --- Excision --- Treatment --- Endocrinology .
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The management of colorectal liver metastases has evolved rapidly over the last decade with the introduction of newer and effective chemotherapies and a redefinition for cure. These range from the philosophical (including the greater awareness of treatment with curative intent), through the practical (more aggressive definition of respectability for cure and the use of more effective chemotherapies for both palliation and as adjuncts to surgery), to the futuristic use of biological strategies (including monoclonal antibodies and gene therapies) and lastly to the pragmatic but equally important issues of health economics (who is going to foot the bill for these increasingly expensive treatment strategies). Liver metastases addresses the contemporary multidisciplinary management of liver metastases. Throughout the text, experience from the paradigms of colorectal cancer metastases treatment strategies are used to point to new directions in the management of liver metastases from other cancers. This book overviews current understanding of the biology of liver metastases, and reviews current methods of detection and diagnosis. Chapters offer objective and systematic reviews of each of the current major treatment modalities: surgical resection; destructive therapies; chemotherapy (systemic and regional); whether there is a role for radiotherapy; biological therapies (including hormone treatment antibodies and gene therapy); and lastly the decision-making strategies that must be employed for successful multidisciplinary management. Featuring state-of-the-art reviews, key points, treatment algorithms and clear, concise illustrations this book provides the ultimate companion to anyone interested or working in the area of liver disease. This book will appeal to consultant and trainee surgeons in general surgery, hepatobiliary surgery, upper GI surgery, colorectal surgery; consultant and trainee medical and clinical oncologists with an interest in liver tumours; and consultant and trainee radiologists with an interest in liver disease.
Colorectal Neoplasms -- Pathology. --- Liver metastasis -- Treatment. --- Liver Neoplasms -- Secondary. --- Liver Neoplasms -- Therapy. --- Liver metastasis --- Colorectal Neoplasms --- Liver Neoplasms --- Pathology --- Intestinal Neoplasms --- Liver Diseases --- Rectal Diseases --- Digestive System Neoplasms --- Colonic Diseases --- Medicine --- Health Occupations --- Intestinal Diseases --- Gastrointestinal Neoplasms --- Digestive System Diseases --- Neoplasms by Site --- Diseases --- Neoplasms --- Gastrointestinal Diseases --- Disciplines and Occupations --- Oncology --- Health & Biological Sciences --- Treatment --- Liver --- Treatment. --- Cancer. --- Hepatocellular carcinoma --- Hepatic metastasis --- Medicine. --- Radiology. --- Oncology. --- Proctology. --- Surgery. --- Medicine & Public Health. --- Imaging / Radiology. --- Metastasis --- Cancer --- Oncology . --- Endocrinology. --- Radiology, Medical. --- Internal medicine --- Hormones --- Tumors --- Surgery, Primitive --- Clinical radiology --- Radiology, Medical --- Radiology (Medicine) --- Medical physics --- Radiological physics --- Physics --- Radiation --- Gastroenterology
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Liver metastases are a frequent and often fatal occurrence in cancer patients, particularly those with malignancies of the gastrointestinal (GI) tract. While recent improvements in surgical techniques and a more aggressive approach to resection of liver metastases have improved long term survival for some patients, most patients with hepatic metastases still succumb to their disease. To improve these dismal statistics, a better understanding of the biology of liver metastasis, particularly the early stages that can be targeted for prevention, is essential. Once cancer cells enter the liver, several different scenarios may occur. The cancer cells may be immediately destroyed by local defence mechanisms, they may enter a state of dormancy as solitary cells and never produce a metastasis, initiate a short-lived process of proliferation that is aborted before a metastasis is established or actively proliferate to form macrometastases. The chapters in Part I of this book provide insight into the cellular/molecular mechanisms that determine which of these scenarios prevails. Written by experts researchers in the filed of metastasis, these chapters provide state-of-the art reviews on the cellular and molecular processes that impact the early stages of the metastatic process. The unique microenvironment of the liver, its various anatomical, cellular and molecular features and the impact they have on metastasis are highlighted. In addition, the role of inflammation (pre-existing and tumor-induced), host innate and adaptive immune responses, cytokines, chemokines, growth factors and the unique molecular signatures of metastatic tumor cells are reviewed with an underscoring of the translational implications of the current state of knowledge. Against this background, the chapters in Part II of the book provide critical reviews on major aspects of the clinical management of hepatic metastases. These include imaging strategies, surgical and chemotherapeutic treatment approaches and the use of targeted biological therapeutics such as anti-angiogenic drugs as treatment modalities. By combining information on biological and clinical aspects of liver metastasis, this volume will serve as an excellent resource for scientists, clinicians, clinician/ scientists and trainees in the domains of oncology, surgical oncology, hepatobiliary physiology and radiology.
Electronic books. -- local. --- Liver metastasis -- Treatment. --- Liver --- Digestive System Neoplasms --- Neoplastic Processes --- Liver Diseases --- Digestive System Diseases --- Neoplasms by Site --- Pathologic Processes --- Neoplasms --- Pathological Conditions, Signs and Symptoms --- Diseases --- Neoplasm Metastasis --- Liver Neoplasms --- Medicine --- Health & Biological Sciences --- Oncology --- Cancer --- Liver metastasis --- Treatment. --- Hepatic metastasis --- Medicine. --- Cancer research. --- Immunology. --- Radiology. --- Oncology. --- Surgical oncology. --- Biomedicine. --- Cancer Research. --- Surgical Oncology. --- Imaging / Radiology. --- Metastasis --- Oncology . --- Radiology, Medical. --- Immunobiology --- Life sciences --- Serology --- Clinical radiology --- Radiology, Medical --- Radiology (Medicine) --- Medical physics --- Oncologic surgery --- Oncological surgery --- Surgical oncology --- Tumors --- Excision --- Treatment --- Radiological physics --- Physics --- Radiation --- Cancer research
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Minimally invasive surgery has become a common term in visceral as well as gynecologic surgery. It has almost evolved into its own surgical speciality over the past 20 years. Today, being firmly established in every subspeciality of visceral surgery, it is now no longer a distinct skillset, but a fixed part of the armamentarium of surgical options available. In every indication, the advantages of a minimally invasive approach include reduced intraoperative blood loss, less postoperative pain, and shorter rehabilitation times, as well as a marked reduction of overall and surgical postoperative morbidity. In the advent of modern oncologic treatment algorithms, these effects not only lower the immediate impact that an operation has on the patient, but also become important key steps in reducing the side-effects of surgery. Thus, they enable surgery to become a module in modern multi-disciplinary cancer treatment, which blends into multimodular treatment options at different times and prolongs and widens the possibilities available to cancer patients. In this quickly changing environment, the requirement to learn and refine not only open surgical but also different minimally invasive techniques on high levels deeply impact modern surgical training pathways. The use of modern elearning tools and new and praxis-based surgical training possibilities have been readily integrated into modern surgical education,which persists throughout the whole surgical career of modern gynecologic and visceral surgery specialists.
Medicine --- ovarian cancer --- laparoscopy --- minimally invasive surgery --- survival --- mortality --- platelet-rich plasma (PRP) --- thin endometrium --- hysteroscopy --- robotic surgery --- sexuality --- laparoscopic hysterectomy --- learning curve --- quality of life --- counseling --- patient-doctor-relationship --- body donors --- surgical education --- clinical anatomy --- live surgery events --- neuropelveology --- LION procedure --- genital nerves stimulation --- chronic pelvic pain --- esophagectomy --- esophageal cancer --- Ivor-Lewis procedure --- health-related quality of life --- cervical cancer --- robotic radical hysterectomy --- recurrence rate --- surgery --- artificial intelligence --- machine learning --- augmented reality --- hysterectomy --- NOTES --- minimally invasive --- systematic review --- meta-analysis --- pediatric surgery --- fetal surgery --- single-incision surgery --- surgical techniques --- surgical devices --- open surgery --- endoscopy --- endoscopic surgery --- cysts of the canal of Nuck --- Nuck hydrocele --- hydrocelectomy --- TAPP --- Lichtenstein --- colorectal liver metastases --- laparoscopic liver surgery --- minimal invasive surgery --- general anesthesia --- anesthetics --- perioperative care --- laparoscopic surgery --- endometrial cancer --- lymphadenectomy --- embryology --- sentinel lymph node mapping --- indocyanine green --- PMMR --- technical aspects --- rectal cancer --- mesorectal --- transanal --- laparoscopic --- local recurrence --- conversion rate --- minimally invasive surgical procedures --- radiotherapy --- ovarian neoplasms --- endometrial neoplasms --- uterine cervical neoplasms --- vaginal neoplasms --- vulvar neoplasms --- survival analysis --- video feedback --- video modeling --- gynecology --- surgical training --- pelvitrainer --- prolapse --- pelvic floor --- native tissue --- pectopexy --- robotic assisted surgery --- pancreatic surgery --- pancreaticoduodenectomy --- pelvic floor repair --- laparoscopic repair --- vaginal repair --- mesh use --- VATS --- pain --- postoperative pain control --- thoracic surgery --- lung cancer --- intercostal catheter --- opioid --- regional anaesthesia --- hepatectomy --- single-port laparoscopy --- radiofrequency pre-coagulation --- endometriosis --- endometrioma surgery --- ovarian reserve --- anti-Müllerian hormone --- spontaneous pregnancy --- robotic liver resection --- da Vinci --- intraoperative imaging --- hepatocellular cancer --- real-life imaging --- hepatic metastasis --- COVID-19 --- sars-cov-2 --- surgical performance --- 3D printing --- skill assessment --- snorkel mask --- malabsorption --- Roux-en-Y gastric bypass --- one-anastomosis gastric bypass --- SADI-S --- biliopancreatic diversion --- weight regain --- hepatocellular carcinoma --- cholangiocarcinoma --- risk score --- pelvic compartments --- embryologic development --- oncologic surgery --- pelvic lymphonodectomy --- topographic anatomy --- autonomic pelvic nerves --- uterine cancer --- prostate cancer --- diaphragmatic hernia --- liver resection --- hernia repair --- mesh --- enterothorax --- ovarian cancer --- laparoscopy --- minimally invasive surgery --- survival --- mortality --- platelet-rich plasma (PRP) --- thin endometrium --- hysteroscopy --- robotic surgery --- sexuality --- laparoscopic hysterectomy --- learning curve --- quality of life --- counseling --- patient-doctor-relationship --- body donors --- surgical education --- clinical anatomy --- live surgery events --- neuropelveology --- LION procedure --- genital nerves stimulation --- chronic pelvic pain --- esophagectomy --- esophageal cancer --- Ivor-Lewis procedure --- health-related quality of life --- cervical cancer --- robotic radical hysterectomy --- recurrence rate --- surgery --- artificial intelligence --- machine learning --- augmented reality --- hysterectomy --- NOTES --- minimally invasive --- systematic review --- meta-analysis --- pediatric surgery --- fetal surgery --- single-incision surgery --- surgical techniques --- surgical devices --- open surgery --- endoscopy --- endoscopic surgery --- cysts of the canal of Nuck --- Nuck hydrocele --- hydrocelectomy --- TAPP --- Lichtenstein --- colorectal liver metastases --- laparoscopic liver surgery --- minimal invasive surgery --- general anesthesia --- anesthetics --- perioperative care --- laparoscopic surgery --- endometrial cancer --- lymphadenectomy --- embryology --- sentinel lymph node mapping --- indocyanine green --- PMMR --- technical aspects --- rectal cancer --- mesorectal --- transanal --- laparoscopic --- local recurrence --- conversion rate --- minimally invasive surgical procedures --- radiotherapy --- ovarian neoplasms --- endometrial neoplasms --- uterine cervical neoplasms --- vaginal neoplasms --- vulvar neoplasms --- survival analysis --- video feedback --- video modeling --- gynecology --- surgical training --- pelvitrainer --- prolapse --- pelvic floor --- native tissue --- pectopexy --- robotic assisted surgery --- pancreatic surgery --- pancreaticoduodenectomy --- pelvic floor repair --- laparoscopic repair --- vaginal repair --- mesh use --- VATS --- pain --- postoperative pain control --- thoracic surgery --- lung cancer --- intercostal catheter --- opioid --- regional anaesthesia --- hepatectomy --- single-port laparoscopy --- radiofrequency pre-coagulation --- endometriosis --- endometrioma surgery --- ovarian reserve --- anti-Müllerian hormone --- spontaneous pregnancy --- robotic liver resection --- da Vinci --- intraoperative imaging --- hepatocellular cancer --- real-life imaging --- hepatic metastasis --- COVID-19 --- sars-cov-2 --- surgical performance --- 3D printing --- skill assessment --- snorkel mask --- malabsorption --- Roux-en-Y gastric bypass --- one-anastomosis gastric bypass --- SADI-S --- biliopancreatic diversion --- weight regain --- hepatocellular carcinoma --- cholangiocarcinoma --- risk score --- pelvic compartments --- embryologic development --- oncologic surgery --- pelvic lymphonodectomy --- topographic anatomy --- autonomic pelvic nerves --- uterine cancer --- prostate cancer --- diaphragmatic hernia --- liver resection --- hernia repair --- mesh --- enterothorax
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Minimally invasive surgery has become a common term in visceral as well as gynecologic surgery. It has almost evolved into its own surgical speciality over the past 20 years. Today, being firmly established in every subspeciality of visceral surgery, it is now no longer a distinct skillset, but a fixed part of the armamentarium of surgical options available. In every indication, the advantages of a minimally invasive approach include reduced intraoperative blood loss, less postoperative pain, and shorter rehabilitation times, as well as a marked reduction of overall and surgical postoperative morbidity. In the advent of modern oncologic treatment algorithms, these effects not only lower the immediate impact that an operation has on the patient, but also become important key steps in reducing the side-effects of surgery. Thus, they enable surgery to become a module in modern multi-disciplinary cancer treatment, which blends into multimodular treatment options at different times and prolongs and widens the possibilities available to cancer patients. In this quickly changing environment, the requirement to learn and refine not only open surgical but also different minimally invasive techniques on high levels deeply impact modern surgical training pathways. The use of modern elearning tools and new and praxis-based surgical training possibilities have been readily integrated into modern surgical education,which persists throughout the whole surgical career of modern gynecologic and visceral surgery specialists.
ovarian cancer --- laparoscopy --- minimally invasive surgery --- survival --- mortality --- platelet-rich plasma (PRP) --- thin endometrium --- hysteroscopy --- robotic surgery --- sexuality --- laparoscopic hysterectomy --- learning curve --- quality of life --- counseling --- patient-doctor-relationship --- body donors --- surgical education --- clinical anatomy --- live surgery events --- neuropelveology --- LION procedure --- genital nerves stimulation --- chronic pelvic pain --- esophagectomy --- esophageal cancer --- Ivor-Lewis procedure --- health-related quality of life --- cervical cancer --- robotic radical hysterectomy --- recurrence rate --- surgery --- artificial intelligence --- machine learning --- augmented reality --- hysterectomy --- NOTES --- minimally invasive --- systematic review --- meta-analysis --- pediatric surgery --- fetal surgery --- single-incision surgery --- surgical techniques --- surgical devices --- open surgery --- endoscopy --- endoscopic surgery --- cysts of the canal of Nuck --- Nuck hydrocele --- hydrocelectomy --- TAPP --- Lichtenstein --- colorectal liver metastases --- laparoscopic liver surgery --- minimal invasive surgery --- general anesthesia --- anesthetics --- perioperative care --- laparoscopic surgery --- endometrial cancer --- lymphadenectomy --- embryology --- sentinel lymph node mapping --- indocyanine green --- PMMR --- technical aspects --- rectal cancer --- mesorectal --- transanal --- laparoscopic --- local recurrence --- conversion rate --- minimally invasive surgical procedures --- radiotherapy --- ovarian neoplasms --- endometrial neoplasms --- uterine cervical neoplasms --- vaginal neoplasms --- vulvar neoplasms --- survival analysis --- n/a --- video feedback --- video modeling --- gynecology --- surgical training --- pelvitrainer --- prolapse --- pelvic floor --- native tissue --- pectopexy --- robotic assisted surgery --- pancreatic surgery --- pancreaticoduodenectomy --- pelvic floor repair --- laparoscopic repair --- vaginal repair --- mesh use --- VATS --- pain --- postoperative pain control --- thoracic surgery --- lung cancer --- intercostal catheter --- opioid --- regional anaesthesia --- hepatectomy --- single-port laparoscopy --- radiofrequency pre-coagulation --- endometriosis --- endometrioma surgery --- ovarian reserve --- anti-Müllerian hormone --- spontaneous pregnancy --- robotic liver resection --- da Vinci --- intraoperative imaging --- hepatocellular cancer --- real-life imaging --- hepatic metastasis --- COVID-19 --- sars-cov-2 --- surgical performance --- 3D printing --- skill assessment --- snorkel mask --- malabsorption --- Roux-en-Y gastric bypass --- one-anastomosis gastric bypass --- SADI-S --- biliopancreatic diversion --- weight regain --- hepatocellular carcinoma --- cholangiocarcinoma --- risk score --- pelvic compartments --- embryologic development --- oncologic surgery --- pelvic lymphonodectomy --- topographic anatomy --- autonomic pelvic nerves --- uterine cancer --- prostate cancer --- diaphragmatic hernia --- liver resection --- hernia repair --- mesh --- enterothorax --- anti-Müllerian hormone
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