Francisco Mora1, Norberto Cassinello2, Maria Mora1, Maia Bosca1, Miguel Minguez1, Joaquin Ortega3. 1. Department of Digestive Diseases, University Clinic Hospital, University of Valencia, Valencia, Spain. 2. Department of Surgery, Unit of Bariatric Surgery, University Clinic Hospital, University of Valencia, Valencia, Spain. 3. Department of Surgery, Unit of Bariatric Surgery, University Clinic Hospital, University of Valencia, Valencia, Spain. Electronic address: joaquin.ortega@uv.es.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: An increase in body mass index has been found to be associated with an increase in the prevalence of gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) symptoms, esophageal mucosal injury, and GERD complications. Few systematic studies with objective tests have evaluated esophageal disorders in the morbidly obese population. OBJECTIVES: To define more precisely in morbidly obese people the incidence of esophageal symptoms and characterize the esophageal disorders using objective data. SETTING: University Hospital, Spain. METHODS: Two hundred twenty-four presurgical morbidly obese patients were submitted to a protocol including a clinical history and objective tests (endoscopy, stationary esophageal manometry, 24-hour esophageal pH monitoring and isotopic emptying of the esophagus). RESULTS: In a morbidly obese population, heartburn (50.9%) and regurgitation (28.6%) were the most prevalent symptoms of GERD. Endoscopy registered hiatus hernia (12.5%) and reflux esophagitis (17.3%). Manometry was often abnormal (33.4%), with a hypotensive lower esophageal sphincter as the most common finding. Esophageal pH-metry was abnormal in 54.2% of the cases. Finally, 9.1% of the patients presented with abnormal isotopic esophageal emptying. A correlation between the degree of obesity and the severity of symptoms/objective tests for esophageal abnormalities could not be found. CONCLUSIONS: In morbidly obese patients, GERD is common, symptoms are unspecific, and there is a high prevalence of pH-metry and manometric abnormalities, unrelated to the degree of obesity.
BACKGROUND: An increase in body mass index has been found to be associated with an increase in the prevalence of gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) symptoms, esophageal mucosal injury, and GERD complications. Few systematic studies with objective tests have evaluated esophageal disorders in the morbidly obese population. OBJECTIVES: To define more precisely in morbidly obesepeople the incidence of esophageal symptoms and characterize the esophageal disorders using objective data. SETTING: University Hospital, Spain. METHODS: Two hundred twenty-four presurgical morbidly obesepatients were submitted to a protocol including a clinical history and objective tests (endoscopy, stationary esophageal manometry, 24-hour esophageal pH monitoring and isotopic emptying of the esophagus). RESULTS: In a morbidly obese population, heartburn (50.9%) and regurgitation (28.6%) were the most prevalent symptoms of GERD. Endoscopy registered hiatus hernia (12.5%) and reflux esophagitis (17.3%). Manometry was often abnormal (33.4%), with a hypotensive lower esophageal sphincter as the most common finding. Esophageal pH-metry was abnormal in 54.2% of the cases. Finally, 9.1% of the patients presented with abnormal isotopic esophageal emptying. A correlation between the degree of obesity and the severity of symptoms/objective tests for esophageal abnormalities could not be found. CONCLUSIONS: In morbidly obesepatients, GERD is common, symptoms are unspecific, and there is a high prevalence of pH-metry and manometric abnormalities, unrelated to the degree of obesity.
Authors: M Singendonk; S Kritas; T Omari; C Feinle-Bisset; A J Page; C L Frisby; S J Kentish; L Ferris; L McCall; L Kow; J Chisholm; S Khurana Journal: Obes Surg Date: 2018-05 Impact factor: 4.129