| Literature DB >> 27151896 |
Rossella Angotti1, Francesco Molinaro2, Carmine Noviello3, Giovanni Cobellis3, Ascanio Martino3, Carmine Del Rossi4, Adrian Bianchi5, Mario Messina2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Esophageal replacement in children is an option that is confined to very few situations including long-gap esophageal atresia and esophageal strictures unresponsive to other therapies (peptic or caustic ingestion). The purpose of our work was to describe the experience of gastric transposition in three Italian centers.Entities:
Keywords: caustic ingestion; children; esophageal atresia; gastric transposition
Year: 2016 PMID: 27151896 PMCID: PMC5444262 DOI: 10.1093/gastro/gow012
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Gastroenterol Rep (Oxf)
Demographic data of the patients and their backgrounds
| Sex | Diagnosis | Background | Age at replacement |
|---|---|---|---|
| Female | EA-I | Gastrostomy – first day of life | 4 years |
| Peritonitis for gastrostomy dislodgement – fifth day of life | |||
| Esophageal anastomosis – 4 months | |||
| Esophageal stenosis – 8 months | |||
| Bowel occlusion, intestinal resection and colonic anastomosis – 3 years | |||
| Female | EA-I | Replogle tube and gastrostomy – first day of life | 4 months |
| Male | EA-III | Closure of TEF, Replogle tube and gastrostomy – first day of life | 4 months |
| Male | EA-III | Closure of TEF, end-to-end anastomosis, gastrostomy | 6 years |
| Recurrent TEF and esophageal stenosis unresponsive to endoscopic treatment | |||
| Dor fundoplication – 2 years | |||
| Female | EA-III | Esophageal anastomosis and closure of TEF – first day of life | 2 years |
| Anastomotic leak, cervical esophagostomy and gastrostomy – first week of life | |||
| Coloplasty – 1 year | |||
| Complicated to graft’s necrosis, jejunostomy and cervical esophagostomy | |||
| Male | EA-III | Closure of TEF, cervical esophagostomy and gastrostomy – first day of life | 15 months |
| Female | Caustic esophageal stenosis | Caustic ingestion – 20 months | 3 years |
| Gastrostomy – 24 months | |||
| Esophageal dilatations complicated with rupture of esophagus | |||
| Female | Caustic esophageal stenosis | Caustic ingestion – 10 years | 11 years |
| Esophageal dilatations for 6 months |
EA: esophageal atresia; TEF: tracheo-esophageal fistula
Figure 1.A 3-year-old female patient with an accidental caustic ingestion: (A) shows an endoscopic picture of esophageal stenosis, and (B) shows an x-ray image of esophageal stenosis.
Figure 2.Main steps of gastric transposition for esophageal atresia: (A) midline upper abdominal incision and elliptical incision around the cervical esophagostomy; (B) exposition of the stomach, closure of the gastrostomy; mobilization of greater and lesser curvatures of the stomach; (C) division of esophagogastric junction and repair of the defect in the stomach; (D) pyloroplasty; (E) dissection for the mediastinal tunnel; (F) pulling up of the stomach through the posterior mediastinal tunnel until the fundus appears at the cervical incision; (G) mobilization of the esophagus; (H) anastomosis between the end of the cervical esophagus and the top of the fundus of the stomach.