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Dive into the research topics where Bernard Langer is active.

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Featured researches published by Bernard Langer.


Gastroenterology | 1976

TOTAL PARENTERAL NUTRITION AT HOME: STUDIES IN PATIENTS SURVIVING 4 MONTHS TO 5 YEARS

Bernard Langer; George Tsallas; Richard C. Chu; A. Kuksis; G. Harvey Anderson

Total parenteral nutrition at home has been delivered to 12 patients surviving for periods ranging from 4 months to 5 years. The route used is a silicone rubber catheter introduced into the superior vena cava. The mean survival of uncomplicated catheters is 15.8 months, but in 4 patients it is in excess of 28 months. The delivery system is a simple pneumatic infusor set, portable and safe to use, and not requiring complicated electronics. All patients have maintained ideal body weight and have been socially rehabilitated, with two exceptions. Detailed metabolic studies are presented and the data include routine biochemical analyses, liver function tests, liver biopsy results, blood aminograms, the plasma phospholipid fatty acid pattern, the plasma lipoprotein pattern, and blood vitamin and trace element profiles. Based on these findings a nutrient program is recommended and discussed.


American Journal of Surgery | 1985

Serendipitous Adrenal Masses: Prevalence, Significance, and Management

M. Abecassls; M.J. McLoughlin; Bernard Langer; J.E. Kudlow

Over a 2 year period, 63 of 1,459 patients examined by computerized tomography were found to have adrenal masses. In 19 patients (1.3 percent of patients examined and 30 percent of patients with adrenal masses), they were unexpected and did not give rise to symptoms or signs. Three patients were explored. Two of the patients had adrenocortical adenomas and a third, a ganglioneuroma. Adrenal function tests were performed in 14 patients and showed evidence of Cushings syndrome in 1 patients and revealed no abnormalities in 13. The lesions in 10 of 11 nonsurgical patients followed by computerized tomography for 11 to 36 months showed no change. One lesion became significantly smaller. In a review of 988 autopsy reports, grossly visible adrenal masses were present in 73 patients (7.3 percent), including 19 adrenocortical adenomas (1.9 percent) and 50 metastases (5 percent). We conclude that serendipitous adrenal masses are usually small, nonfunctioning, and benign, the most common lesion being adrenocortical adenoma. A protocol has been suggested for management to identify the minority of patients with functioning or malignant lesions and to avoid unnecessary surgery in the others who have benign disease.


American Journal of Surgery | 1995

Quality of life, nutritional status, and gastrointestinal hormone profile following the Whipple procedure.

Robin S. McLeod; Bryce R. Taylor; Brenda I. O'Connor; Gordon R. Greenberg; Khursheed N. Jeejeebhoy; Dawna Royall; Bernard Langer

Pancreatic cancer is the second commonest gastrointestinal cancer, after colorectal cancer, in Canada, and most other European and North American countries. Unfortunately, most patients present with advanced locoregional or metastatic disease. For the 10-20% of patients who have localized disease, pancreatic resection is generally the preferred treatment option. Because pancreaticoduodenectomy can be performed safely in expert hands, it has become a more accepted procedure for patients with pancreatic cancer. Furthermore, it has also meant that there is increasing scrutiny of the longterm outcome of patients, especially their nutritional status and quality of life. In a study of 25 unselected patients who had a Whipple procedure at least 6 months previously and were not known to have residual or recurrent disease, patients appeared to have few gastrointestinal symptoms compared to control patients. However, none of the subjects appeared to be clinically malnourished. Dietary intake and lean body mass were comparable to that of the control group. Quality of life was excellent in these patients. The mean utilities were 0.98 and 1.0 suggesting near normal wellbeing. Similarly, results using the SIP and GIQLI suggested no/minimal impairment in general wellbeing and gastrointestinal function. Two other studies suggest that median survival and performance status are improved in patients having a resection, but it may be due to their disease being more favorable rather than the treatment being beneficial. Further studies objectively assessing the quality of life of all patients undergoing treatment for pancreatic cancer at the various disease stages are required.


American Journal of Surgery | 1985

Periampullary tumors: Which ones should be resected?*

Beverly A. Jones; Bernard Langer; Bryce R. Taylor; Murray J. Girotti

Resection was carried out in 118 patients for periampullary lesions. Ninety-eight of these were adenocarcinomas and were treated by the Whipple operation, total pancreatectomy, or local resection (87 patients, 7 patients, and 4 patients, respectively). Diagnosis of pancreatic head carcinoma before resection was falsely positive in 27 percent of the patients. Mortality for radical resection was 4 percent. Five year survival for ampullary carcinoma was 32 percent, and for pancreatic head carcinoma it was 7 percent. Resection of all periampullary tumors is recommended, with the Whipple operation being the standard in most cases.


Gastroenterology | 1986

Effects of Peritoneovenous Shunting on Body Composition

Laurence M. Blendis; J.E. Harrison; D.M. Russell; Cindy Miller; Bryce R. Taylor; Paul D. Greig; Bernard Langer

The effect of peritoneovenous shunting on body composition has been studied in 7 cirrhotic patients undergoing a successful shunt and 3 patients in whom the shunt was unsuccessful. In the 7 patients with functioning shunts, their weight had decreased by a mean of 9 kg (p less than 0.001) by 6 wk after initial diuresis, natriuresis, and kaliuresis, and was associated with a decrease in total body potassium (TBK) but not total body nitrogen (TBN). This resulted in a significant decrease in the TBK/TBN ratio from 2.12 +/- 0.74 to 1.66 +/- 0.20 (p less than 0.01). By a mean of 14 mo, in these 7 patients there was a significant increase in mean TBN (from 1.54 +/- 0.10 to 1.84 +/- 0.10, p less than 0.005) associated with an improvement in the mean nitrogen index (from 0.74 +/- 0.04 to 0.88 +/- 0.04, p less than 0.005). These changes were associated with a significant increase in nonalcoholic calories, a nonsignificant increase in protein consumption, and a positive nitrogen balance. After the initial kaliuresis, mean potassium balance remained constantly positive (+22.7 +/- 3.4 mmol/day), serum aldosterone levels normalized, and TBK increased. In contrast, 3 patients with failed peritoneovenous shunting continued to lose weight significantly despite the presence of ascites; TBN and nitrogen index also decreased. In conclusion, body composition studies appear to have confirmed the clinical observation that cirrhotic patients with massive ascites have depleted body protein which is gradually repleted only after successful shunting. In this situation TBK, long used as a measure of lean body mass, is less satisfactory than TBN and nitrogen index. This improvement in body protein appears to be explained by an increased dietary intake associated with improved nitrogen balance, but these changes are not found in patients in whom the shunt failed.


World Journal of Surgery | 2005

Transduodenal Resection of Peri-Ampullary Lesions

Elijah Dixon; Charles M. Vollmer; Ajay Sahajpal; Mark S. Cattral; David R. Grant; Bryce R. Taylor; Bernard Langer; Steven Gallinger; Paul D. Greig

Transduodenal resection (TDR) of lesions near the ampulla of Vater is an alternative to the Whipple pancreaticoduodenectomy. A retrospective analysis was performed to determine the long-term outcome and the utility of intraoperative frozen section examinations in aiding operative decision making in patients undergoing TDR. From 1992 to 2002, 19 patients with an average age of 64.2 years (range: 33–84 years) underwent a transduodenal resection of a peri-ampullary lesion; median follow-up was 47 months (range: 2–100 months). Pathology of the lesions was as follows: 11 with benign ampullary adenomas, including 4 with familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP); 7 with peri-ampullary adenocarcinomas; and 1 with a benign stricture. Survival for the entire cohort is 100%. In 12 cases an intraoperative frozen section was performed. The specificity and positive predictive value of the intraoperative histology were both 100%, and the sensitivity and negative predictive value were 57% and 38%, respectively. Three of the 4 patients with FAP have recurrent adenomatous change; 2 of the 7 with carcinoma have metastatic adenocarcinoma. Transduodenal resection of peri-ampullary lesions appears to be a safe alternative to radical resection for benign adenomas and selected carcinoma. Intraoperative frozen section assessment is recommended in cases of potential adenocarcinoma.


Diseases of The Colon & Rectum | 1984

Morphologic studies of intestinal allograft rejection

Zane Cohen; S. Nordgren; A. Lossing; James Cullen; G. Craddock; Bernard Langer

The usefulness of isolated intestinal pouches of an intestinal allograft for monitoring mucosal histoloty during rejection episodes was studied in a canine model.Total small intestinal autotransplantation was performed in four dogs, and allotransplantation in 18 dogs. Isolated pouches from the proximal and distal ends of the allografts were brought to the skin as stomas. Serial biopsies were obtained from these pouches. Nine allotransplants were treated with a suboptimal dose of cyclosporine. Nine allografied dogs were not immunosuppressed.Biopsies from all animals were normal the first two days postoperatively, and remained so in the autotransplants. Mononuclear cell infiltration in the lamine propria and submucosa was seen up to five days before death from rejection of the allograft in dogs on cyclosporine. At autopsy, all dogs had histologic findings in the transplanted bowel similar to those of simultaneously obtained pouch biopsies.The results show that histologic changes in isolated pouches from intestinal allotransplants reflect changes in the incontinuity segment of the graft and, therefore, such pouches can be used for histologic monitoring of the graft.


Diseases of The Colon & Rectum | 1985

Small intestinal transplantation. A closer reality.

Ramses Wassef; Zane Cohen; Bernard Langer

The purpose of this study was to determine whether small intestinal transplantation could be considered as an alternative in the treatment of patients suffering from the short-bowel syndrome. The site of absorption of oral cyclosporine A was determined as were the changes that follow small intestinal transplantation. The interactions between the lipophilic cyclosporine A molecule and fat emulsion solutions used for total parenteral nutrition were investigated. Finally, a technique for harvesting the entire small bowel in man was developed. The absorption of oral cyclosporine A in normal dogs, and in bowel-resected, autotransplanted, and allotransplanted dogs was determined. Cyclosporine A levels were monitored in all animals. This demonstrated that cyclosporine A is absorbed through the small bowel and carried through the lymphatics; that absorption is decreased to 40 percent of normal after autotransplantation or allotransplantation without rejection. Rejection further hampers cyclosporine A absorption. Administration of olive oil alone enhances absorption of cyclosporine A. We also administered cyclosporine A IV to five dogs, with and without a concomitant infusion of fat emulsion solution (Intralipid®). No changes in plasma cyclosporine A levels, in the clearance of cyclosporine A, or in thein vivo distribution of cyclosporine A were noted. Finally, dissections in six cadavers and in four brain-dead organ donors were performed, and a reproducible technique for harvesting the small bowel in man was established. In selected patients with the short-bowel syndrome, small intestinal transplant may be considered as an alternative therapy to home total parenteral nutrition.


American Journal of Surgery | 1973

Bile duct injury: Results of repair using a changeable stent☆

R.M. Stone; Zane Cohen; Bryce R. Taylor; Bernard Langer; E.B. Tovee

Abstract The results of treatment in eight patients with complicated bile duct injuries treated by transhepatic through and through tubes are presented. The follow-up study of as long as forty-two months indicates excellent results with no subsequent surgery necessary for stricture. The proposition that this technic is superior to others, however, will have to await longer follow-up study in most of these patients.


Scandinavian Journal of Gastroenterology | 1985

Experimental and Clinical Intestinal Transplantation

Zane Cohen; Ramses Wassef; S. Nordgren; Bernard Langer

Before 1972 several attempts were made to perform small intestinal transplantation in man for the treatment of diseases leading to major losses of the small intestine. No patient had survived for more than 76 days despite intensive conventional immunosuppressants. Small intestinal allotransplantation has been investigated, experimentally, since 1959. Lillehei initially reported the results of allotransplantation of various lengths of small intestine in the canine model. Surgical techniques for successful allogeneic small intestinal transplantation as well as the methods for graft preservation, were clarified. Autotransplants of the total small bowel in dogs survived indefinitely. However, in dogs receiving total small intestinal allotransplants the mean survival period was 8-15 days. Both rejection and graft-versus-host disease have been implicated in the short survival of experimental animals. With the advent of cyclosporine and its known action against both rejection and graft-versus-host disease, we studied the results of parenteral cyclosporine on the survival of dogs following total small intestinal allotransplantation. Cyclosporine greatly prolongs survival to a mean of 103 days, following transplantation of the small bowel, compared to only 12 days in dogs not receiving any immunosuppressive agent. Two of the treated dogs lived for longer than 200 days and one dog lived for more than 400 days. Following this, we have developed a method of histological monitoring of the allograft by making two exterior isolated pouches of the allograft, representing the histological events leading to rejection of the in-continuity bowel.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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Paul D. Greig

Toronto General Hospital

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David R. Grant

Toronto General Hospital

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Ramses Wassef

Toronto General Hospital

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S. Nordgren

Toronto General Hospital

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A. Lossing

Toronto General Hospital

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