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Featured researches published by Petri E. Voutilainen.


Annals of Surgery | 2000

Ultrasonically Activated Shears in Thyroidectomies : A Randomized trial

Petri E. Voutilainen; Caj Haglund

OBJECTIVE To test whether the advantages of the ultrasonically activated shears (UAS) observed in thyroidectomies in a previous matched-pair study could be repeated in a randomized trial. SUMMARY BACKGROUND DATA The UAS has been documented, mainly in nonrandomized studies, to be a safe and fast device in video-assisted and conventional surgery. METHODS Thyroidectomies and lobectomies performed for benign or malignant thyroid disease between August 1997 and January 1999 were included in this series. Separate randomization, resulting in four sets of envelopes, was done for one consultant endocrine surgeon and for senior residents for both lobectomies and for total thyroidectomies. The operations performed with the UAS were compared with operations performed with the conventional method, using ligatures as the main hemostatic method. Main outcome measures were operating time, postoperative serum calcium level, palsy of the recurrent laryngeal nerve, and amount of intraoperative and postoperative bleeding. Possible bias that could have been caused by imbalance between treatment groups for surgeon experience was tested by two-way analysis of covariance. RESULTS Thirty-six patients were randomized, 19 to the UAS and 17 to the conventional group. Mean operating time was 99.1 minutes in the UAS group and 134.9 minutes in the conventional group. The average savings in operating time with the UAS was thus 35.8 minutes. There was no difference in complications between the groups. The estimated savings in operating time would have been 1.66 times that observed in this study if the groups had been unbalanced with reference to surgeon experience. CONCLUSION The UAS is a usable device in total thyroidectomies and lobectomies.


World Journal of Surgery | 1999

Anaplastic Thyroid Carcinoma Survival

Petri E. Voutilainen; Multanen M; Reijo Haapiainen; Ari Leppäniemi; Arto Sivula

Abstract. Anaplastic thyroid carcinoma is a rare, highly malignant tumor of elderly people. The purpose of this retrospective study was to characterize the patient population and to detect a potential subgroup with better prognosis or any intervention that would be useful. From 1967 through 1994 a total of 33 anaplastic thyroid carcinomas were operated on at the Second Department of Surgery, Helsinki University Central Hospital. There were 26 females and 7 males with mean age of 66.0 years (range 36–89 years). At the time of diagnosis 16 of 33 patients had distant metastases, and 32 of 33 of the tumors had invaded the thyroid capsule. Disease-specific survival was 9.7% (95% confidence interval from 2.0% to 25.9%) at 1 year using the product limit survival analysis. In the stepwise Cox proportional hazards regression model, local resectability (p= 0.0002), presence of distant metastases at diagnosis (p= 0.0014), radiotherapy (p= 0.014), and radioiodine ablation (p= 0.039) were independent prognostic factors. We concluded that even though statistically significant, independent, prognostic factors can be found the survival of the patients with the best prognostic characteristics is still poor. Only one patient, who had an anaplastic carcinoma focus within an encapsulated follicular thyroid carcinoma, survived in this series. At present there seems to be no surgical treatment that would be efficient for treating symptomatic anaplastic thyroid carcinoma.


American Journal of Surgery | 1998

Ultrasonically activated shears in thyroid surgery

Petri E. Voutilainen; Reijo Haapiainen; Caj Haglund

BACKGROUND Ultrasonically activated shears (UAS) have been documented to be both safe and fast devices in laparoscopic surgery. We studied whether the use of UAS would have some advantage in thyroid surgery. METHODS Thyroidectomies, performed by one senior endocrine surgeon between December 1996 and February 1997, were retrospectively matched, with patients operated on by the same surgeon using the conventional method. RESULTS Six pairs of total thyroidectomies and one pair of lobectomies could be matched. Mean operating time was 100 minutes for the patients operated on with the UAS and 154 minutes for the patients operated on with the conventional method. The mean operating time with the UAS was thus on average 64.6% of the operation time with the conventional method, with a 95% confidence interval from 50.1% to 83.5% (t = 4.00, 6 df, P = 0.007). CONCLUSIONS In this material the use of UAS reduced significantly operating time in thyroidectomies.


Thyroid | 2001

Prognosis After Lymph Node Recurrence in Papillary Thyroid Carcinoma Depends on Age

Petri E. Voutilainen; Multanen M; Ari Leppäniemi; Caj Haglund; Reijo Haapiainen; Kaarle Franssila

Papillary thyroid carcinoma (PTC) is a malignancy that has good prognosis especially among patients up to 45 years of age; about half of the patients are female and of childbearing age. Lymph node recurrence (LNR) occurs in 10%-14% of patients but is considered to be associated with relatively good prognosis. The purpose of this study was to estimate the association between patient age at primary operation, and the behavior of the disease after LNR. Between 1967 and 1994, 495 patients underwent surgery for primary PTC at the Department of Surgery, Helsinki University Central Hospital. There were 391 (79.0%) women and 104 (21.0%) men with a mean age of 44.5 years (range, 10.8-85.4 years). Fifty-eight patients in whom LNR was the first clinical sign of persistent disease after complete clinical response to primary treatment were included in this series. At the time of primary operation, 37 (64.3%) of the 58 patients who developed LNR were younger than 45 years of age and 21 patients were older. The mean times to LNR in these groups were 42.0 months (range, 3.0-194.5 months) and 49.0 months (range, 3.6-209.0 months) respectively. Carcinoma-specific 5-year survival after LNR was 100% (95% confidence interval [CI] 88.8%-100.0%) in patients ages up to 45 years and 61.1% (40.5%-82.8%) in older patients; 10-year survival rates were 100%, and 41.3% (p < 0.0001), respectively. Relative survival at 10 years was 98.6% for patients ages up to 45 years and 42.6% for older patients (p = 0.0014). Using the Cox model it was shown that development of LNR after primary treatment has an independent highly significant negative effect on survival (p < 0.001) in patients over 45 years of age. Prognosis of PTC even after LNR on patients ages up to 45 years at the time of the primary operation is almost parallel to the normal reference population, but in patients over 45 years of age the prognosis is relatively poor.


Diseases of The Colon & Rectum | 1991

Recovery of anal sphincter function following transabdominal repair of rectal prolapse: cause of improved continence?

A. Peter Sainio; Petri E. Voutilainen; Antero I. Husa

Twenty-eight patients with complete rectal prolapse underwent anorectal manometry before and 6 months and 1–2 years after abdominal rectopexy and sigmoid resection in a study of the mechanisms responsible for postoperatively improved anal continence. Preoperatively, 22 patients reported defective anal control. Seven patients (all with minor incontinence) regained normal control and eight other patients achieved improved continence after surgery. Anal resting, squeeze, and voluntary contraction pressures were significantly lower for defective than for normal control, with a significant rise in these pressures at 6 months after the operation, except for those incontinent patients in whom continence was not improved. No further pressure rise was seen later. Improvement of continence was not accompanied by changes in rectal sensation or reflexive functions of the internal anal sphincter. These results suggest that recovery of the resting and voluntary contraction functions of the sphincter muscles was the cause of continence improvement observed after surgery. Anal manometry was unable to predict outcome of function. Therefore, supplementary procedures for restoration of continence are not advisable, although patients with only minor incontinence are likely to regain full continence after rectopexy alone.


World Journal of Surgery | 1998

Adrenalectomy for Primary Aldosteronism: Long-term Follow-up Study in 29 Patients

Jukka Sirén; Matti Välimäki; Kauko Huikuri; Arto Sivula; Petri E. Voutilainen; Reijo Haapiainen

Abstract. Primary aldosteronism consists of a mixture of subgroups. The operative treatment is successful only in cases of aldosterone-producing neoplasia (and in rare cases of primary unilateral hyperplasia); all other cases should be treated medically. The aim of this study was to determine if aldosterone-producing neoplasia had been successfully differentiated from the other subgroups and the outcome of operative treatment. Altogether 29 patients with primary aldosteronism were operated on between January 1, 1979 and December 31, 1993. Patient charts were reviewed retrospectively. The follow-up data were collected from the patients’ charts, and all patients were contacted to obtain recent blood pressure and serum potassium values. The patients were asked about symptoms related to hyperaldosteronism. If any suspicion of recidive aldosteronism was present, patients were carefully reexamined by hormonal tests and computed tomography (CT). A total of 27 patients had unilateral adenoma, 1 patient had hyperplasia, and 1 patient had an aldosterone-producing cortical carcinoma. There was no operative mortality or morbidity. The serum potassium level had normalized in all patients. Mean follow-up time was 76 months. One patient died during the follow-up from cholangiocarcinoma; 11 patients (41%) were cured by the operation, 10 patients (37%) have a mild but medicated hypertension, and in the remaining 22% the hypertension persisted but was well controlled by the medication. Of the 29 patients, 28 were correctly diagnosed as having an aldosterone-producing neoplasm. Basic hormonal studies and CT can be used effectively to differentiate aldosterone-producing neoplasia from hyperplasia in most cases.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 1998

Minimally Invasive Coronary Artery Bypass Grafting Using the Right Gastroepiploic Artery

Sari Voutilainen; Kalervo Verkkala; A. Järvinen; Markku Kaarne; Pekka Keto; Petri E. Voutilainen; Severi Mattila

BACKGROUND Anastomosis of the left internal thoracic artery to the left anterior descending artery without sternotomy and without cardiopulmonary bypass is a standard approach in minimally invasive coronary artery bypass grafting. To expand the indications for minimally invasive coronary artery bypass grafting from one-vessel disease to two-vessel disease, we began to perform anastomosis of the right gastroepiploic artery (RGEA) to the right coronary artery (RCA). METHODS From February to November 1996, an RGEA graft was used in 25 of the 100 patients who underwent minimally invasive coronary artery bypass grafting at our clinic. Eleven of the patients had only RCA disease and 14 had both RCA and left anterior descending artery disease. One of the operations was a redo coronary artery bypass grafting. The RGEA was anastomosed to the RCA through a laparotomy incision and the left internal thoracic artery was anastomosed to the left anterior descending artery through a left anterior thoracotomy. In 5 patients, the RGEA was lengthened by venous grafting. RESULTS All patients underwent angiography after operation; 82.6% of the RGEA grafts and all the left internal thoracic artery grafts were functioning well. In three of the four nonvisualized RGEA grafts, the percentage of proximal stenosis of the RCA seen on postoperative angiography was not critical (40%, 50%, and 50%, respectively), allowing significant competitive flow through the native bypassed RCA. The patency of all the RGEA grafts without competitive flow was 95%, with a 95% confidence interval of 75.1% to 99.9%. CONCLUSIONS The indications for minimally invasive coronary artery bypass grafting could be extended to primary operations in patients with left anterior descending artery and RCA lesions by using both the left internal thoracic artery and the RGEA.


Annals of Surgery | 1999

Angiographic 20-year follow-up of 61 consecutive patients with internal thoracic artery grafts

Sari Voutilainen; Antero Järvinen; Kalervo Verkkala; Pekka Keto; Leo Heikkinen; Petri E. Voutilainen; Pekka-T. Harjola

OBJECTIVE To assess the behavior of internal thoracic artery (ITA) grafts versus venous grafts in repeated angiograms up to 20 years. SUMMARY BACKGROUND DATA Use of ITA grafts to bypass left anterior descending artery stenosis has been shown to be associated with improved survival in patients undergoing coronary artery bypass grafting. METHODS Sixty-one consecutive patients who received one or two ITA grafts and who underwent surgery from Oct. 5, 1971, to Dec. 18, 1973, in Helsinki University Central Hospital, Finland, were included in this prospective follow-up series. Fifty-six of the patients (92%) also received at least one venous graft. The number of distal anastomoses was 157, of which 47.7% (75) were performed with ITA grafts. The median age of the patients was 47.7 years (range 30.0 to 63.1), and 85% (52) were men. RESULTS After 20 years of follow-up, 18/20 (90%) of the survivors underwent angiography; the patency rate was 88.9% for ITA grafts and 47.8% for venous grafts. Cumulative graft patency at 20 years, using all the information obtained from repeated angiographic examinations and autopsies, was also calculated to eliminate selection bias. The cumulative 20-year patency rate was 81% for ITA-left anterior descending artery anastomoses, 53.8% for venous graft-right coronary artery anastomoses, and 48.5% for venous graft-left circumflex artery anastomoses. In paired comparisons between anastomoses, the patency time of the ITA-left anterior descending artery anastomoses was on average 2.8 years longer than the venous graft-left circumflex artery patency time and 2.6 years longer than the venous graft-right coronary artery. CONCLUSIONS Internal thoracic artery grafts, especially in left anterior descending artery anastomoses, should be considered as a primary solution in coronary artery bypass grafting surgery in patients with >10 years of life expectancy; if venous grafting is preferred, further evidence is needed.


Journal of Cardiac Surgery | 1999

Minimally lnvasive Coronary Artery Bypass Grafting: One‐Year Follow‐Up

Kalervo Verkkala; Sari Voutilainen; A. Järvinen; Pekka Keto; Petri E. Voutilainen; M. Salmenperä

Background: Use of the minimally invasive direct coronary artery bypass grafting (MIDCAB) technique has been associated with excellent primary results, and sparing of resources has been assumed. There is, however, a limited amount of information available concerning the results of mid‐term follow‐up. The purpose of this study was to present 1‐year follow‐up results of our first 130 consecutive MIDCAB patients. Methods: MIDCAB operations, defined as no sternotomy, no cardiopulmonary bypass, and no aortic manipulation were started in our clinic in February 1996. One hundred thirty patients requiring invasive treatment of coronary artery disease who were not suitable for percutaneous transluminal angioplasty were included in this series. The main outcome measures were mortality, the need for subsequent invasive treatment, and 1‐year NYHA classification. Results: There was one hospital death, but during the first‐year follow‐up, four additional deaths occurred and three patients were reoperated on with conventional techniques. Five percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasties (PTCAs) had to be performed, two because of anastomosic stenosis. Additionally, cardiac‐ or operation‐related symptoms caused a total of 27 hospital visits among 23 patients during the first‐year follow‐up. Angiographic left internal thoracic artery (LITA)‐left anterior descending artery (LAD) patency was 97.4% (37/38) (confidence interval [CI] ranged from 86.2% to 99.9%) at 3 months. After 1 year, 86.9% (113/130) of the patients were without symptoms. A clear improvement of the follow‐up results was observed to be associated with increased experience during the study period. Conclusions MIDCAB operations, after some experience, can be performed with relatively good outcome. However, special attention should be directed to determination of correct anastomosic site and to avoiding anastomosic stenosis. We also recommend extended mobilization of the ITA and use of specific stabilizers. (J Card Surg 1999;14:231–237)


Anticancer Research | 2003

AMES, MACIS and TNM prognostic classifications in papillary thyroid carcinoma.

Petri E. Voutilainen; Päivi Siironen; Kaarle Franssila; Arto Sivula; Reijo Haapiainen; Caj Haglund

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Reijo Haapiainen

Helsinki University Central Hospital

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Arto Sivula

Helsinki University Central Hospital

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Caj Haglund

University of Helsinki

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Multanen M

Helsinki University Central Hospital

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Kalervo Verkkala

Helsinki University Central Hospital

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Pekka Keto

Helsinki University Central Hospital

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Sari Voutilainen

Helsinki University Central Hospital

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A. Järvinen

Helsinki University Central Hospital

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Kaarle Franssila

Helsinki University Central Hospital

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