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Laparoscopic treatment of severe dysphagia after Nissen fundoplication

This video demonstrates the laparoscopic revision of slipped Nissen-Rossetti fundoplication performed previously by open technique. The patient's primary symptom was dysphagia and the surgeon decided to take down the previous wrap and perform a gastropexy. No redo fundoplication was done in this case.

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Laparoscopic   treatment   of   severe   dysphagia   after   Nissen   fundoplication

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摘要
This video demonstrates the laparoscopic revision of slipped Nissen-Rossetti fundoplication performed previously by open technique. The patient's primary symptom was dysphagia and the surgeon decided to take down the previous wrap and perform a gastropexy. No redo fundoplication was done in this case.
分類
controversial cases
關鍵字
媒體類型
期間
21'15''
刊物
2006-02
普通的
最愛
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音訊
en es
副標題
en
數位出版
WeBSurg.com, Feb 2006;6(02).
URL: http://www.websurg.com/doi-vd01en1915.htm

Laparoscopic   treatment   of   severe   dysphagia   after   Nissen   fundoplication

6. Dissection of the valve 08'53''
I haven’t seen the vagus trunk yet, so this is why we are looking a little bit more before cutting. This is the vagus trunk which is outside the fundoplication. We can keep it there, we know where it is and we know that it’s still there. I want to clear this, I will try to preserve this nerve. We can see more and more as we are dissecting. The angulation of the esophagus and the valve go like this, a little bit too low, so the esophagus probably can’t empty very well. This is a little bit of stomach I think, and if we look at the position of the esophagus, it usually goes straight there on the left. This woman didn’t have reflux symptoms beforehand, I think she had more emptying problems of the stomach. We will dismantle this valve, maybe we can find something else and we will do some sort of gastropexy there on the angle of His. On the manometry study there was no complete relaxation of the ileus, so there is still something that can control reflux. This stitch is stenotic, it’s quite large there and here it’s stenotic. We are dismantling the fundoplication, we test the lower esophagus by putting down the esophageal tube which is 34 French, so it’s not very large or big but I just want to be sure that there is nothing left besides the fundoplication and be sure that there is no intrinsic stenosis. So this is the tube, we know that after dismantling the fundoplication, there is no outlet obstruction anymore. The first aim of the operation is probably reached, the 2nd problem now is should we redo a fundoplication? In this patient, I don’t think so because there is no history of reflux disease but more probably a history of gastric emptying problem, we will just dismantle the fundoplication. We could leave it like this but I am afraid that the fundoplication twists a little bit on the left side. Horizontal crura instead of vertical crura, it’s very typical in young and thin women that complain of these types of problem. I have seen it a lot of times and you probably also have, it is very difficult to do a good fundoplication in these patients because it is difficult to place properly the fundoplication there instead of there. If you do it, you should place the fundoplication here and not here. This is the right part of the fundoplication, when I am redoing, I always use scissors and coagulation instead of the ultrasonics or those sorts of devices because of precision. I am not used to having bipolar on my operating table, it’s probably a difference in philosophy between France and Belgium; in Belgium, the surgeon rarely uses bipolar cautery, it’s more used by the gynecologist. But looking at the different indications for bipolar, I think it’s very helpful but I can’t work with it. Maybe we can create a gastro-esophageal reflux disease by the first operation and then dismantling it, so we don’t know but the choice between the two options, either dysphagia versus recurrent symptoms of heartburn, dysphagia can be treated with medication, heartburn can’t be treated so we will choose this first option. Then if once we have some difficulties to deal with reflux disease, we will probably have new options of intraluminal treatment such as the Stretta procedure. I prefer to create a reflux disease than persistent dysphagia, that is the option we will go for in this precise patient. When patients have dysphagia and recurrent symptoms, I get the option of redoing the fundoplication but here it’s not the point. There are still some adhesions there. You feel it when you hold the structure; the previous surgeon used part of the body of the stomach to create the fundoplication and that explains the radiological image with medial gastric stenosis.