| Literature DB >> 21188010 |
Toshifumi Matsumoto1, Koichi Izumi, Akio Shiromizu, Kohei Shibata, Masayuki Ohta, Seigo Kitano.
Abstract
As a palliative bypass for unresectable gastric or periampullary cancer, gastrojejunostomy (GJ) is sometimes associated with postoperative delayed gastric emptying. We report the successful laparoscopic application of this procedure in a 78-year-old man with duodenal obstruction. Computed tomography revealed a mass in the duodenum along with multiple masses in the liver. A radiological image showed an ulcerative tumour in the third portion of the duodenum occluding the lumen. He was diagnosed as having an unresectable duodenal cancer with multiple liver metastases. He needed palliative bypass surgery. Laparoscopically, the stomach was partially divided using an endoscopic autosuture device, and end-to-side GJ was performed successfully. He was given a normal diet on the fourth postoperative day, and there was no delayed gastric emptying. Laparoscopic gastric partitioning GJ is a feasible and safe procedure to prevent postoperative delayed gastric emptying in case of malignant duodenal obstruction.Entities:
Keywords: bypass; gastrojejunostomy; laparoscopic; palliative; unresectable
Year: 2005 PMID: 21188010 PMCID: PMC3001169 DOI: 10.4103/0972-9941.18997
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Minim Access Surg ISSN: 1998-3921 Impact factor: 1.407
Figure 1Schema of gastric partitioning gastrojejunostomy
Figure 2Computed tomography reveals a tumor in the third portion of the duodenum.
Figure 3Upper gastrointestinal image showed the ulcerative tumor in the third portion of the duodenum narrowing the lumen.
Figure 4End-to-side gastrojejunostomy was created using an endoscopic autosuturing stapler.
Figure 5Upper gastrointestinal images shows that most barium medium passes the anastomotic portion, While a little amount passes through the tunnel of the lessere curvature