Radical surgery
Radical surgery | |
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Other names | Radical dissection |
Specialty | Surgery |
Radical surgery, also called radical dissection, is surgery that is more extensive than "conservative" surgery.
In surgical oncology, radical surgery is surgery intended to remove both a tumor and any metastases thereof, for diagnostic and/or treatment purposes.[1] It typically describes the removal of a tumor or mass and ancillary lymph nodes that may drain the mass, as in radical mastectomy.[2] It is opposed to for example palliative surgery which is intended for symptom relief rather than complete removal of cancer tissue.
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/f/f8/SOX10_immunohistochemistry_of_lentigo_maligna.jpg/220px-SOX10_immunohistochemistry_of_lentigo_maligna.jpg)
In histopathology, radicality of tumor excisions is generally defined as the absence of tumor cells in a certain resection margin, with the specific margin width varying by tumor type and local guidelines.[3] A non-radical excision may require re-excision.[clarification needed]
References
[edit]- ^ "Radical surgery". Farlex medical dictionary. Retrieved 2019-12-12.
- ^ radical dissection - The Free Dictionary
- ^ Schlitter, Anna Melissa; Esposito, Irene (2010). "Definition of Microscopic Tumor Clearance (R0) in Pancreatic Cancer Resections". Cancers. 2 (4): 2001–2010. doi:10.3390/cancers2042001. ISSN 2072-6694. PMC 3840457. PMID 24281214.