Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Thoracic Surgery Interesting Case Hadley Wesson February 21, 2013.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Thoracic Surgery Interesting Case Hadley Wesson February 21, 2013."— Presentation transcript:

1 Thoracic Surgery Interesting Case Hadley Wesson February 21, 2013

2 49 yo female with history of achalasia – Left thoracotomy with Heller myotomy in 1979 – Symptoms resolved until late 1980s – Underwent multiple dilations without improvement – Manometry 3 years ago Aperistalsis Incomplete relaxation of the LES

3

4 Taken to OR for redo laparoscopic Heller myotomy and Dor fundoplication

5 Intra-operatively

6

7 5 cm 3 cm

8 Heller myotomy

9 3 cm

10 Dor fundoplication

11 Surgical Approaches to Achalasia Advances in the field since 1979

12 Achalasia Motility disorder of the esophagus Diagnosed by manometry – Incomplete relaxation of the LES – Aperistalsis of the esophageal body

13 Surgical Treatment Directed at obliterating the dysfunctional LES Myotomy of the lower esophagus and GEJ

14 Surgical Treatment Directed at obliterating the dysfunctional LES Myotomy of the lower esophagus and GEJ – 2 incision approach described by Heller in 1913 – Modified in 1923 into a single incision

15 Surgical Treatment In 1962, Dor described a partial fundoplication Fundus is anchored to the right myotomized esophagus and right crus

16 Operative Controversies Role of minimally invasive surgery Addition of a concurrent antireflux procedure The length of the myotomy

17 Role of Minimally Invasive Surgery Reported Swallowing Results in Long Run

18 Role of Minimally Invasive Surgery Reported Swallowing Results in Long Run

19 Role of Minimally Invasive Surgery Effect of Laparoscopic Heller Myotomy Mean esophageal diameterLES pressure

20 Operative Controversies Role of minimally invasive surgery Addition of a concurrent antireflux procedure The length of the myotomy

21 Operative Controversies Role of minimally invasive surgery Addition of a concurrent antireflux procedure The length of the myotomy

22 Concurrent antireflux procedure

23 Does Dor fundoplication affect incidence of pathologic GER? N=43 patients – 21 Heller – 22 Heller plus Dor – Follow up 3-5 months with pH study and questionnaire

24 Concurrent antireflux procedure

25 Pathologic GER – Heller: 48% – Heller + Dor: 9% RR 0.11 (95% CI 0.02-0.59; P=0.01)

26 Concurrent antireflux procedure Distal esophageal acid exposure was lower

27 Myotomy Length Traditionally, the recommendation was to end the myotomy as it crossed the GEJ (0.5 cm) – Preserved an effective anti-reflex barrier

28 Myotomy Length Traditionally, the recommendation was to end the myotomy as it crossed the GEJ (0.5 cm) – Preserved an effective anti-reflex barrier In the 1990s, recommended length was 1.5 cm

29 Myotomy Length Traditionally, the recommendation was to end the myotomy as it crossed the GEJ (0.5 cm) – Preserved an effective anti-reflex barrier In the 1990s, recommended length was 1.5 cm In 1998, University of Washington extended the myotomy 3 cm to further decrease reoccurrence

30 Myotomy Length N=110 patients – Standard laparoscopic myotomy (1.5 cm in the stomach) plus Dor = 52pts (1994-1998) – Extended laparoscopic myotomy (3 cm) plus Toupet = 58 pts (1998-2001)

31 Myotomy Length Pre-operative characteristics

32 Myotomy Length Pre-operative characteristics

33 Myotomy Length

34

35

36

37 Limitations – Study design Different time intervals Different follow up periods – Standard myotomy: 46 months – Extended myotomy: 16 months Different fundoplications – Extended myotomy group had worse pre-operative dysphasia

38 Operative Controversies Role of minimally invasive surgery Addition of a concurrent antireflux procedure The length of the myotomy

39 Operative Controversies Role of minimally invasive surgery Addition of a concurrent antireflux procedure The length of the myotomy Remain


Download ppt "Thoracic Surgery Interesting Case Hadley Wesson February 21, 2013."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google