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Dive into the research topics where Michał Bielewicz is active.

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Featured researches published by Michał Bielewicz.


European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery | 2008

Additional pulmonary resections after pneumonectomy: actual long-term survival and functional results

Tomasz Grodzki; Jacek Alchimowicz; Anna Kozak; Bartosz Kubisa; J. Pieróg; Janusz Wójcik; Michał Bielewicz; Dominika Witkowska

OBJECTIVE Pulmonary resections after pneumonectomy due to metastases or metachronous non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) are rare because of the high potential risk of the second procedure and uncertain long-term results. On the basis of our series (largest in Europe) we tried to assess the long-term survival of patients treated in stage IV NSCLC. METHODS Retrospective analysis was carried out on 18 patients treated at our department by pneumonectomy followed by additional resection in the years 1981-2002 (15 males and 3 females, 44-69 years, mean 57). Eleven pneumonectomies were performed on the right side and seven on the left. Twelve squamous cell carcinomas and six adenocarcinomas were diagnosed. All patients were staged postoperatively as IIB-IIIA (four were N2). Their WHO status ranged between 0 and 1. The second surgical procedure (16 wedge resections, 2 chest wall resections) was performed 4-106 months later (mean 26). The patients staged N2 were radiated postoperatively. RESULTS There were no early postoperative deaths. The morbidity rate after second surgery was comparable to that observed after ordinary wedge resection. Histology of the lesions removed during the second operation was the same as after pneumonectomy in all patients. The pulmonary function tests (PFT) results worsened significantly but still reached 56-63% of the predicted values. Sixteen resected tumors of the remaining lung were staged T1 (<3cm), 2 - T3 (<3cm but infiltration of the parietal pleura on an area of 2-4cm(2)). Three patients revealed N2 disease (they were all N0 after pneumonectomy). All patients were considered M1 after second surgery. WHO status after the second procedure remained the same in 8 patients (44%) and worsened in 10 patients (56%). The survival rates were as follows: 11 patients survived 2 years (61%) while 8 patients survived 5 years (44%). The majority of patients died due to lung cancer (70%) but all the rest (30%) due to circulatory or respiratory insufficiency. There was a significant difference (p<0.05) in 5-year survival for N0-N1 vs N2 status (63% vs 14% - 1 patient) and also regarding the time interval between surgeries: less than 12 months vs more than 12 months (0% vs 63%). CONCLUSIONS Pulmonary resections performed after pneumonectomy due to NSCLC are rare procedures but with an acceptable perioperative risk. The second procedure should be limited to wedge resection. The prognosis is poor for patients with N2 status and for those treated by second surgery earlier than 12 months after the first procedure.


Advances in Medical Sciences | 2013

Lung cancer in situs inversus totalis (SIT) - literature review

Janusz Wójcik; Tomasz Grodzki; Michał Bielewicz; M Wojtyś; Bartosz Kubisa; J. Pieróg; N Wójcik

We present 21 studies of cases of lung cancer in patients with situs inversus totalis (SIT) published worldwide. The first case was described in 1952. Thirteen patients were from Japan, 4 from Eastern Europe, including 2 Polish cases from the authors` center (Department of Thoracic Surgery, Pomeranian Medical University in Szczecin, Poland), 2 from Western Asia, 1 from the U.S. and 1 from Australia. Male patients (20/21) as well as left-sided lung cancer cases (14/21) and squamous cell carcinoma cases (8/21) dominated in the entire group. Thirteen patients underwent surgical treatment. There were 10 left-sided and 3 right-sided surgical interventions with uneventful intra- and postoperative course. Explorative thoracotomy was performed in one case only on the right side. Upper lobectomy was performed in 5 cases, pneumonectomy in 3 cases, lower bilobectomy and middle lobectomy in one case and lower lobectomy in two cases. Surgery was performed through thoracotomy in 10 cases, VATS-assisted approach in two cases and sternotomy in one case. Descriptions of the surgical anatomy confirmed mirror image of the anatomy in all cases and were consistent with the preoperative CT images. Preoperative diagnosis was discussed including the role of 3-D reconstruction of CT for improving perioperative safety in this group of patients. In conclusion, lung cancer/SIT cases despite inversed but regular anatomy can be operated on radically as cases with normal anatomy with preservation of intraoperative security level.


European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery | 2010

Vancomycin lung concentration in acute and hyperacute rejection models of lung transplantation in rats.

J. Pieróg; Bartosz Kubisa; Marek Droździk; Janusz Wójcik; Michał Bielewicz; Juliusz Pankowski; Krzysztof Safranow; Tomasz Grodzki

OBJECTIVES This study assesses vancomycin concentrations in allogenic transplanted rat lung tissue in acute and hyperacute rejection models of the lung. METHODS Left lung allotransplantation was performed from a male Brown Norway donor to a male Fisher F344 recipient in the case of an acute rejection model (the animals were sacrificed 5 days after transplantation) as well as a male Brown Norway donor to a male Wistar recipient in the case of hyperacute rejection (the animals were sacrificed 2 days after transplantation). Control rats were sham-operated and sacrificed on day 2 or 5, respectively, of the experimental model. Rejection was confirmed by blood gas assessment and lung histological examination. A single intraperitoneal dose of vancomycin 30 mg kg(-1) body weight was administered on the day of autopsy (day 2 or 5 from transplantation, respectively, of the experimental model), and then the blood and lung specimens were sampled at 0, 5, 1, 2, 4 and 6h from the time of drug injection. RESULTS Arterial blood gas assessment (Wistar rats - pO(2): 44.33 ± 21.73 mmHg (mean ± standard deviation (SD)); Fisher rats - pO(2:) 50.67 ± 14.30 mmHg (mean ± SD)) as well as histopathologic examinations of lung grafts confirmed rejection. Vancomycin lung/plasma concentration ratio was significantly higher in transplanted rats than in sham-operated animals. CONCLUSIONS Both acute and hyperacute lung rejection affect the lung/serum of vancomycin in the transplanted lung resulting in higher drug accumulation, especially in late post-dosage time.


Polish Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery | 2018

Evaluation of the metabolic response to open and minimally invasive resection of the oesophagus due to oesophageal cancer

Jarosław Pieróg; Michał Bielewicz; Janusz Wójcik; Bartosz Kubisa; Krzysztof Kaseja; Krzysztof Safranow; Magdalena Dołęgowska; Piotr Waloszczyk; Tomasz Grodzki

Aim The aim of this study was to compare the metabolic response in the early postoperative period after radical resection of stage I and II oesophageal cancer applying a minimally invasive procedure and an open procedure involving classical laparotomy and thoracotomy. Material and methods Serum concentrations of interleukin 6 (IL-6), procalcitonin (PCT), C-reactive protein (CRP), tumour necrosis factor-α (TNF-α), and total serum protein (TP) and leukocyte count (WBC) in blood collected on the day of surgery prior to the procedure (day 0) and on days 1, 2 and 7 after the surgery were measured in two groups of patients undergoing oesophageal resection due to cancer: applying a minimally invasive procedure involving laparoscopy and videothoracoscopy (group A) and applying a classical procedure involving full opening of the chest and abdominal cavity (group B). The study involved a total of 24 patients divided into two groups of 12 patients each. Results Tumour necrosis factor-α concentration was lower in group A compared to group B on day 0, PCT concentration was lower in group A compared to group B on day 2 after surgery, and on the remaining days TNF-α and PCT concentrations were not statistically different between groups. Conclusions Lower concentration of PCT on post-surgery day 2 in the group of patients undergoing minimally invasive oesophageal resection seems to be associated with a smaller perioperative injury. Lower TNF-α concentration in serum collected on day 0 in the group of patients undergoing minimally invasive resection is associated with a lower stage of oesophageal cancer in this group.


Polish Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery | 2015

Veno-venous extracorporeal membrane oxygenation in a patient with severe acute respiratory failure –

Bartosz Kubisa; Paweł Dec; Anna Lesińska; Anna Bocheńska; Piotr Wasilewski; Grzegorz Feldyk; Anna Kubisa; Jarosław Pieróg; Michał Bielewicz; Tomasz Grodzki

Acute respiratory failure resistant to conventional pulmonary therapy often requires intensive medical care. In rare cases, ventilator therapy proves insufficient, and only the option of employing veno-venous extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO V-V) remains. The present article describes the case of a 23-year-old patient who experienced severe acute respiratory distress syndrome with associated multiple organ failure. The patient was admitted to the pulmonary ward of the Alfred Sokołowski Regional Pulmonary Hospital in Szczecin-Zdunowo with suspected pneumonia of unknown etiology. After the initial 5 days of diagnostics at the pulmonary ward, the patient required a further 97 days of hospital treatment and spent 63 days at the Intensive Care Unit. There, he underwent ECMO V-V therapy lasting 22 days, which resulted in the improvement of his arterial blood gas parameters and clinical condition.


Kardiochirurgia i Torakochirurgia Polska/Polish Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery | 2015

CASE REPORTS Veno-venous extracorporeal membrane oxygenation in a patient with severe acute respiratory failure – case report

Bartosz Kubisa; Paweł Dec; Anna Lesińska; Anna Bocheńska; Piotr Wasilewski; Grzegorz Feldyk; Anna Kubisa; Jarosław Pieróg; Michał Bielewicz; Tomasz Grodzki

Acute respiratory failure resistant to conventional pulmonary therapy often requires intensive medical care. In rare cases, ventilator therapy proves insufficient, and only the option of employing veno-venous extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO V-V) remains. The present article describes the case of a 23-year-old patient who experienced severe acute respiratory distress syndrome with associated multiple organ failure. The patient was admitted to the pulmonary ward of the Alfred Sokołowski Regional Pulmonary Hospital in Szczecin-Zdunowo with suspected pneumonia of unknown etiology. After the initial 5 days of diagnostics at the pulmonary ward, the patient required a further 97 days of hospital treatment and spent 63 days at the Intensive Care Unit. There, he underwent ECMO V-V therapy lasting 22 days, which resulted in the improvement of his arterial blood gas parameters and clinical condition.


Kardiochirurgia i Torakochirurgia Polska = Polish Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery | 2015

Veno-venous extracorporeal membrane oxygenation in a patient with severe acute respiratory failure – case report

Bartosz Kubisa; Paweł Dec; Anna Lesińska; Anna Bocheńska; Piotr Wasilewski; Grzegorz Feldyk; Anna Kubisa; Jarosław Pieróg; Michał Bielewicz; Tomasz Grodzki

Acute respiratory failure resistant to conventional pulmonary therapy often requires intensive medical care. In rare cases, ventilator therapy proves insufficient, and only the option of employing veno-venous extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO V-V) remains. The present article describes the case of a 23-year-old patient who experienced severe acute respiratory distress syndrome with associated multiple organ failure. The patient was admitted to the pulmonary ward of the Alfred Sokołowski Regional Pulmonary Hospital in Szczecin-Zdunowo with suspected pneumonia of unknown etiology. After the initial 5 days of diagnostics at the pulmonary ward, the patient required a further 97 days of hospital treatment and spent 63 days at the Intensive Care Unit. There, he underwent ECMO V-V therapy lasting 22 days, which resulted in the improvement of his arterial blood gas parameters and clinical condition.


Advances in respiratory medicine | 2009

Non-small cell lung cancer in patient with visceral total inversion

Michał Bielewicz; Małgorzata Wojtyś; Dominika Witkowska; Jacek Alchimowicz; Janusz Wójcik; Tomasz Grodzki


Kardiochirurgia i Torakochirurgia Polska/Polish Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery | 2012

Lung cancer in situs inversus totalis (SIT) – a case report

Janusz Wójcik; Bartosz Kubisa; Jarosław Pieróg; Michał Bielewicz; Norbert Wójcik; Krzysztof Kaseja; Tomasz Grodzki


Interactive Cardiovascular and Thoracic Surgery | 2017

P-166EVALUATION OF THE METABOLIC RESPONSE TO OPEN AND MINIMALLY INVASIVE RESECTION OF THE OESOPHAGUS

J. Pieróg; Michał Bielewicz; Janusz Wójcik; Bartosz Kubisa; Krzysztof Kaseja; Krzysztof Safranow; B Dołęgowska; Piotr Waloszczyk; Tomasz Grodzki

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Tomasz Grodzki

Pomeranian Medical University

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Bartosz Kubisa

Pomeranian Medical University

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Janusz Wójcik

Pomeranian Medical University

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Jarosław Pieróg

Pomeranian Medical University

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Anna Kozak

Pomeranian Medical University

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J. Pieróg

Pomeranian Medical University

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Jacek Alchimowicz

Pomeranian Medical University

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Małgorzata Wojtyś

Pomeranian Medical University

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Krzysztof Safranow

Pomeranian Medical University

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Maria Piotrowska

Pomeranian Medical University

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