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Eur J Cardiothorac Surg 1999;16:266-272
© 1999 Elsevier Science NL
Section of General Thoracic Surgery, Department of Surgery, University of Catania, Catania, Italy
Corresponding author
e-mail: mmiglior{at}mbox.unict.it
| Abstract |
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Key Words: Gastro-oesophageal reflux Fundoplication Laparoscopy Complication
| 1. Introduction |
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Despite several studies reporting on complications of surgery for correction of GOR [15] very little information is available in the medical literature on the pathophysiological characteristics of the oesophageal motility in patients with TF; nevertheless we have recently noted in clinical experience that some patients operated for correction of GOR with a fundoplication develop postoperatively, as a predominant and new symptom, the pharyngo-oesophageal dysphagia (POD). The aim of the study was therefore to elucidate in patients with a TF the pathophysiologic characteristic of the swallowing mechanisms and to determine the cause of POD by studying the motility patterns of the pharynx and the entire oesophagus, and then to correlate the data with the features observed in patients without TF.
| 2. Material and methods |
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Criteria for inclusion in the group A (TF) were: (a) the presence of postoperative persistent dysphagia and (b) the absence of oesophageal clearance failure.
An operation for GOR with a fundoplication but without postoperative dysphagia and a manometric study performed within 1 year following surgery were required to include the patients in the group B (control group).
| 3. Manometric studies |
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We measured several manometric variables including the following: (a) the amplitude of pharyngeal contraction; (b) the upper oesophageal sphincter (UOS) resting pressure; (c) the UOS contraction amplitude; (d) the coordination between pharynx and UOS relaxation; (e) the coordination between UOS contraction and upper oesophageal contraction; (f) the amplitude of oesophageal contraction; (g) the lower oesophageal sphincter (LOS) resting pressure and (h) the lower oesophageal sphincter relaxation.
| 4. Manometric interpretation and definitions |
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Tight fundoplication was defined as a fundoplication with a postoperative lower oesophageal sphincter pressure of greater than or equal to 30 mmHg (the mean + 3 SD of control).
Oesophageal ramp pressure represented, as defined by Mathew at al. [7], a rise in intraluminal oesophageal pressure just before swallow induced peristaltic contraction.
Dysphagia was considered persistent when the duration was longer than 12 months. Pharyngo-oesophageal dysphagia was defined as difficulty in initiating the act of swallowing within 1 s.
4.1. Statistical methods
Statistical analysis was performed using the MannWhitney non-parametric test to evaluate the significance between groups. A probability value less than 0.05 was considered significant. The differences between groups with respect to abnormal relaxation, numbers of repetitive contractions and ramp pressure were analyzed using Fisher's exact test. The difference was significant when P=0.015; where appropriate, correlation coefficient R2 was used to determine the relationship between variables.
Data relating to patient demographics were expressed as the mean and range and data relating to manometric characteristics as the mean±, range and standard deviation (SD).
| 5. Results |
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In the group B we included 21 patients, seven males and 14 females with a mean age of 53 years (range 2879 year).
Previous operations of the patients in the group A were Nissen in two and Nissen-Rossetti in eight and in the group B Nissen in five, Nissen Rossetti in 12 and Toupet in four. Four out 10 patients of the group A had no manometric studies performed prior to surgery. Three out 10 patients of the group A have been operated in our Department.
In group A the symptoms are summarized in Table 1. All three patients with POD presented chest pain and weight loss as associated symptoms.
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| 6. Discussion |
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In recent years the laparoscopic technique increases dramatically the number of operations performed for correction of gastro-oesophageal reflux resulting in an increased number of reported failures and complications such as the creation of a tight wrap [4,9,10]. The pathophysiological mechanisms responsible for the development of postoperative dysphagia are still uncertain and the aetiology seems to be multifactorial [7]. Recently Peters et al. [11] showed that persistent dysphagia was more common in the laparoscopic group compared to open surgery (9.4 vs. 2.7%), while Watson et al. [12] and Orsoni et al. [13] reported fibrotic stenosis of the muscular oesophageal hiatus to be one specific complication of the laparoscopic technique. We believe that manometry is the most useful diagnostic test to study the unhappy patient with a TF; in fact manometric studies are of paramount importance to obtain information on oesophageal motility and can suggest the appropriate treatment.
We have noted that all patients with TF had a total fundoplication and that 80% of the operations were performed laparoscopically. The crura was always approximated and all fundoplications were performed via abdominal approach. We have also documented that four out of 10 patients with a TF fundoplication had no manometric studies performed prior to surgery demonstrating the importance of a full preoperative diagnostic work-up. A weakness of the study is due to the fact that four patients in group A did not have preoperative physiological studies, but this was out of our control because the patients were operated by other surgeons. Although the possibility of preoperative dysmotility in the three patients with postoperative POD cannot be demonstrated, clinically none of these patients presented preoperative POD.
Regarding the LOS characteristics of patients with TF the mean resting pressure was 36 mmHg (ranges from 30 to 54 mmHg) and the relaxation was abnormal in 60% of them; this alteration could be secondary to surgical manipulation in the early postoperative period but is always abnormal at a later date, it should be attributed to the presence of a tight wrap.
Manometric changes of the oesophagus in patients with a TF have not been previously described although Skinner [14] and Low et al. [15] reported that manometry frequently showed a motor disorder which may be secondary to an oesophageal obstruction following the antireflux repair. We excluded six patients with persistent postoperative dysphagia because, on manometry, it was demonstrated a failure of oesophageal clearance and the LOS resting pressure was below 30 mmHg.
The current study clearly demonstrates that the entire oesophagus and also the pharynx increase the amplitude of contraction in response to the creation of a distal oesophageal wrap above 30 mmHg, twice that of the control group without oesophageal dysphagia: these responses seem to be physiological like a tension in all the oesophageal tube and pharynx.
Mathew et al. [7] demonstrated recently that ramp pressure is elevated in patients with a laparoscopic Nissen fundoplication and that triple lumen perfused catheter, equipped with side hole sensors fails to show this manometric finding. On the contrary we were able to demonstrate, using a standard perfused motility catheter, that ramp pressure is more elevated in patients with TF while it is not always present in patients with a mean LOS of 21 mmHg (group B).
Only a few months ago, our group [16] and the Leuven group of Lerut et al. [17] reported the presence of POD in patients with fundoplication. From our knowledge and from a computerized research on medline, it seems that POD, as a predominant and new symptom following surgery for correction of GOR has never been reported, therefore the neuromuscular mechanisms involved in the development of this symptom is unknown. The strong correlation existing between the pharyngeal amplitude and the UOS contraction suggests a close relationship between the pharynx and the oesophagus; this is the main reason because we believe that the UOS contraction should be considered a trans-sphincteric contraction. This hypothesis can explain, even if the number of the patient is small, the development of POD in patients with TF.
It should be emphasized that, in our experience, all three patients with POD presented associated a TF and the motility abnormalities detected at manometry were that two out of the three patients with POD presented a sphinctero-oesophageal inco-ordination (Fig. 4) while in one patient a very high amplitude of pharyngeal contraction was demonstrated. All three patients with POD presented chest pain and weight loss as associated symptoms.
Lerut treated one of these patients with a crico-oesophageal myotomy to solve the problem; despite crico-oesophageal myotomy is the most common surgical procedure to restore normal deglutition in patients with POD [18], in the present experience, because all three patients presented a TF and associated chest pain and weight loss, we preferred to treat the underlying problem which was, in our cases, the presence of a tight wrap: two patients required a surgical intervention for symptom relief and were operated through a left thoracotomy to enable full mobilization of the oesophagus and complete visualization of the cardia, upper stomach and fundoplication [14]; in both cases we took down the prior repair (one Nissen and one NissenRossetti) and a Belsey Mark IV fundoplication was performed. The third patient is on follow-up after two oesophageal dilatations.
We believe that it is possible that in the follow-up clinic the surgeon does not ask about POD and, when the patient refers to it, the surgeon includes the patient in the large category of bolus pharyngeous or globus hystericus; therefore we strongly believe that the symptom of POD is under-recognized.
To summarize a TF is, in our experience, always associated with a total fundoplication, therefore a TF could be synonimus of total fundoplication. It generates a significant augmentation of the amplitude contractions in the oesophageal body and, surprisingly, in the pharyngo-oesophageal segment. Where there is no failure of oesophageal clearance in the upper oesophagus the POD is explained with the higher pressures in the pharynx and with crico-oesophageal inco-ordination. Redo surgery, which consists of taking down the prior repair with the association of a partial fundoplication such as Belsey Mark IV, seems necessary to solve the symptom.
In conclusion, the appearance of pharyngo-oesophageal dysphagia in the postoperative period in patients operated for correction of GOR using a total fundoplication, should not be under-estimated because it suggests an obstruction of the distal oesophagus.
| 7. Appendix A: Editorial comment |
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There are a number of aspects of this paper that require comment. First let me say that the statistical methodology employed in the study, namely use of non-parametric hypothesis testing, is appropriate when comparing continuous data that are not normally distributed for which contingency tables with small individual cell counts are constructed. What is missing, however, is an appreciation of the total number of fundoplication operations, particularly those exhibiting postoperative dysphagia, from which the patients under comparison in this study were selected. Only in this way can we conclude whether or not the observations reported are based on a highly selected number of patients and therefore may not be representative of the large numbers of fundoplication procedures being currently performed by others.
Eighty percent of the procedures were performed laparoscopically. Is this approach playing a role in these reported findings? It has been shown that the risk of postoperative dysphagia following a laparoscopic antireflux procedure is higher than that following the open operation [4]. The majority of patients in both groups analyzed by Migliore and Deodata underwent a Nissen-Rosetti procedure in which the short gastric vessels are not divided, thus making it more difficult to achieve a loose floppy wrap than is possible with division of these vessels as well as the posterior gastric artery by an open approach. While the authors emphasize the level of pressure at the lower sphincter following a total wrap, they say nothing about the length of the wrap which may be equally important in the production of postoperative dysphagia. Most surgeons now prefer a short wrap (12 cm). However, it is unlikely that any of these technical variations contribute to post fundoplication POD.
In summary, this is a provocative paper which should influence all surgeons performing antireflux surgery to study carefully patients who develop persistent dysphagia following operation to exclude the possibility of pharyngo-oesophageal dysfunction. Such studies will not only clarify the significance of the observations of the authors but may provide a physiologic explanation for the development of this complication, which in my experience is extraordinarily rare.
References
[1] Migliore M, Basile F, Juppa A, et al. Pathophysiology of the swallowing mechanisms in patients with tight Nissen fundoplication. Can J Gastroenterol 1998;12(Suppl 13):104-319.
[2] Ellis Jr FH, Gibbs SP, Heatley GJ. Reoperation after failed antireflux surgery: Review of 101 cases. Eur J Cardio-thorac Surg 1996;61:1106-1111.
[3] Stein HJ, Feussner H, Siewert JR. Failure of antireflux surgery: causes and management strategies. Am J Surg 1996;171:36-40.
[4] Hunter JG, Swanstrom L, Waring JP. Dysphagia after laparoscopic anti-reflux surgery. The impact of operative tecnique. Ann Surg 1996;224:51-57.
| Acknowledgments |
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| Footnotes |
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| Appendix B |
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Dr M. Migliore: In case of patients with postoperative pharyngoesophageal dysphagia, I think, first of all, we should perform the oesophageal manometry of the entire oesophagus. If we demonstrate, as we found in our study, a high pressure in the lower oesophageal sphincter, we should take down the fundoplication, which was in our patients a Nissen type fundoplication. If the pressure in the lower oesophageal sphincter is normal a myotomy of the upper sphincter can be justified only if there are no motor abnormalities in the oesophageal body.
Dr Lerut: But if you don't have high sphincter pressure in the lower sphincter, can you then speak about a tight Nissen? Probably not.
Dr Migliore: No, I agree with you. Tight fundoplication was defined when the postoperative lower oesophageal sphincter pressure was above or equal to 30 mmHg.
Dr Lerut: So the mechanism will be different then?
Dr Migliore: Yes. A patient with dysphagia but without tight fundoplication can develop the symptom as a consequence of oesophageal clearance failure.
Mr K. Jeyasingham (Bristol, UK): I think you've documented what you have said in manometric terms. But tell me, in your patients, did the pharyngoesophageal dysphagia come up before the lower oesophageal dysphagia, and how long before, or did they come after the lower oesophageal dysphagia, in which case you would probably have investigated it earlier?
Dr Migliore: Our patients developed the pharyngo-esophageal dysphagia in the early follow-up and without the association of the lower oesophageal dysphagia. The symptom is the most predominant and generally is associated with chest pain and weight loss. Concerning your second question, in our institution before this study we used to investigate earlier the patient with lower oesophageal dysphagia.
Mr J. Thorpe (Leeds, UK): It's very rare to have to take down a Nissen fundoplication. I would make a plea for a conservative approach, like a dilatation, in the first instance, before going on to myotomies and undoing the plication. Do you think the motility changes are secondary to the operation and due to disturbed denervation? What do you think the mechanism of these changes are, particularly in the upper sphincter? Is this just a normal response to a more obstructive sphincter?
Dr Migliore: All the three patients with pharyngo-esophageal dysphagia underwent oesophageal dilatation. We operated on two of them because there was no response and the third patient is on follow-up after two sessions of dilatation. Regarding the pathphysiological mechanism is not known, we demonstrated that the tight wrap in the distal oesophagus can also cause a functional obstruction of the upper oesophageal sphincter, which is explained with the crico-esophageal inco-ordination. We can speculate that the mechanism of these changes is a vagus nerve injury due to the presence of the tight wrap, but we have currently no data which can confirm this hypothesis.
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