| Literature DB >> 17518247 |
Vincenzo Maffettone1, Gianluca Rossetti, Pierfrancesco Rambaldi, Federica Russo, Vincenzo Cuccurullo, Luigi Brusciano, Gianmattia del Genio, Gianluca Russo, Francesco Pizza, Luigi Mansi, Alberto del Genio.
Abstract
After esophagectomy, the stomach is usually used to restore digestive continuity. To prevent postoperative delayed gastric emptying, most authors perform a gastric drainage procedure or transpose a tubulized stomach. The aim of our work is to evaluate the emptying of a transposed whole stomach without performing a pyloromyotomy or a pyloroplasty. From 1996 to January 2004, 45 patients underwent total esophagectomy for cancer or for caustic stenosis. Reconstruction of digestive continuity was realized through transposition of the whole stomach without performing a pyloric drainage procedure. At 12 months after the intervention, 35 patients (77.8%; 20 men and 15 women) were submitted to a gastric emptying scintigraphic study by means of ingestion of a mixed meal labeled with 37 MBq 99mTc-sulfur colloid. Mean half-emptying time was 71.4 minutes (range, 15-90 minutes; reference range, 83 +/- 34 minutes): all the patients were in the normal range except one. No patient complained of delayed gastric emptying symptoms. After esophagectomy, the transposition of the whole stomach without a pyloric drainage procedure seems to be an interesting option, and is not associated with delayed gastric emptying.Entities:
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Year: 2007 PMID: 17518247
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int Surg ISSN: 0020-8868