Media Partner

Surgery is one of the options in treating pancreatic cancer.

The types of surgery selected to take out the tumor may include:
- Whipple procedure. This is a surgical procedure in which the head of the pancreas, the gallbladder, part of the stomach, part of the small intestine, and the bile duct are removed. Enough of the pancreas is left to produce digestive juices and insulin.
- Total pancreatectomy. This operation removes the whole pancreas, part of the stomach, part of the small intestine, the common bile duct, the gallbladder, the spleen, and nearby lymph nodes.
- Distal pancreatectomy. In this option, the body and the tail of the pancreas and usually the spleen are removed.


If the cancer has spread and cannot be removed, palliative surgery may be recommended. To relieve symptoms, the following interventiond may me used:
- Surgical biliary bypass. If cancer is blocking the small intestine and bile is building up in the gallbladder, a biliary bypass may be recommended. During this operation, the doctor will cut the gallbladder or bile duct and sew it to the small intestine to create a new pathway around the blocked area.
- Endoscopic stent placement. If the tumor is blocking the bile duct, surgery may be done to put in a stent to drain bile that has built up in the area. The doctor may place the stent through a catheter that drains to the outside of the body or the stent may go around the blocked area and drain the bile into the small intestine.
- Gastric bypass. If the tumor is blocking the flow of food from the stomach, the stomach may be sewn directly to the small intestine so the patient can continue to eat normally.

Comment

You need to be a member of Onco'Zine to add comments!

Join Onco'Zine

Bookmark / Share

© 2012   Created by Peter Hofland, PhD.

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service