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Browsing by Author "Prasad, R."

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    Hilar cholangiocarcinomas - from nihilism to aggressive treatment
    (The College of Surgeons of Sri Lanka, 2012) Liyanage, C.; Nawaratne, M.; Pathirana, A.; Gunasekara, D.; Pranahewa, L.; Prasad, R.; Wijeratne, T.; Bogammana, M.; Wijesooriya, R.; Siriwardhana, R.
    INTRODUCTION: Hllar-Cholangio-carcinomas (HCC) are aggressive tumours with a dismal prognosis. The general tendency amongst all specialities is to palliate them. As response to adjuvant therapy is marginal we have embarked on aggressive management of these patients with the available surgical and endoscopic expertise. METHODS: Patients presenting to the North Colombo Teaching hospital· and the Gastrointerology unit of the National hospital in 2011 were included . All had Tri phasic CT , MRCP or ERCP prior to be discussed at MDT with all the above authors regarding further management. Patients with Bismuth 1 v lesions and unfit for surgery underwent Combination ERCP/doublestenting/RFA of lesion/Rendezvous procedure/Percutaneous, stenting or PTC. RESULTS: 32 patients were treated .5/32 had radical surgical resections (2 extended right hepatectomy with bile duct resecton and lymphadenectomy (BDR+LA), 2 extended left hepatectomy +BDR+LA, and 1 extended heft hepatectomy with BDR+LA+Reconstruction of Right hepatic artery and right portal vein. I underwent segment iii bypass. 7 patients underwent ERCP and serial RFA with stenting. 3/5 patients are alive and disease free at 6-12 months. CONCLUSIONS: Where possible HCC patients should be offered a curative resection. RFA gives longer and better palliation compared to standard stenting. These patients should be managed by a specialized team as aggressive management may improve their survival.
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    A Protocol for dynamic magnetic resonance imaging of the pelvic floor
    (Springer India, 2013) Ratnatunga, K.; Deen, K.I.; Prasad, R.
    Methods of dynamic magnetic resonance imaging (dMRI) of the pelvic floor vary among centers making interpretation investigator-dependent and comparison of results difficult. We describe a protocol utilizing standard MRI equipment, which achieves high image quality while remaining practical and cost-effective. Fifteen patients, with difficulty in evacuation of stool, underwent dMRI. Each patient was trained prior to the procedure. The pelvis was mapped in the sagittal plane using T2-weighted dMRI in rest, strain and evacuation phases with rectal hydro-gel as contrast. Images obtained were used to identify and quantify the dynamics of each pelvic compartment. Acquisition time for each phase was 14 seconds. Extensive patient instruction and T2-weighted dMRI with rectal contrast optimized image quality and efficiency. The evacuation phase yielded data on the extent of dysfunction and compartment prolapse, not seen in the other phases. These findings led to change in management in 67 % (n=10) of patients.

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