Blom Dennis, Peters Jeffrey H, DeMeester Tom R, Crookes Peter F, Hagan Jeffrey A, DeMeester Steven R, Bremner Cedric
Division of Thoracic/Foregut Surgery, Department of Surgery, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA 9033, USA.
J Gastrointest Surg. 2002 Jan-Feb;6(1):22-7; discussion 27-8. doi: 10.1016/s1091-255x(01)00051-8.
The aim of this study was to determine whether preoperative physiologic factors can account for and be used to predict the development of postoperative dysphagia after laparoscopic Nissen fundoplication. One hundred sixty-three patients with gastroesophageal reflux disease underwent laparoscopic Nissen fundoplication with a median follow-up of 14 months (range 6 to 81 months). Preoperative dysphagia was present in 37% (60 of 163) and was relieved in all but five patients (92%). Female sex (P = 0.01) and the presence of a stricture (P = 0.02) were the only preoperative variables associated with the presence of preoperative dysphagia. Eight percent (8 of 103) of patients without preoperative dysphagia developed new-onset dysphagia, and of these 63% (5 of 8) had a normal lower esophageal sphincter (LES) (pressure >6 mm Hg; length >2 cm; abdominal length >1 cm). New-onset dysphagia was significantly more common in patients with a normal LES (22% [5 of 23] vs. 4% [3 of 80], P = 001). Patients with a normal LES had almost a sixfold increase in the risk of developing dysphagia as those with an abnormal LES (relative risk = 5.8). Only a preoperative normal LES (P = 0.02) or mean LES pressures (P = 0.04) were positively associated with the development of postoperative dysphagia. The severity of this dysphagia also showed a strong positive trend of increasing with mean preoperative LES pressures (P = 0.07). Finally, preoperative LES pressure significantly correlated with postoperative LES pressure (r = 0.48, P = 0.01) and with mean residual LES (nadir) pressure (r = 0.33, P = 0.05) offering insight into the mechanism of this dysphagia. In conclusion, preoperative LES parameters play a role in the development of dysphagia after laparoscopic Nissen fundoplication. Patients with a normal LES or high mean LES pressures are at increased risk for developing this complication and should be informed of this before laparoscopic Nissen fundoplication.
本研究的目的是确定术前生理因素是否可解释并用于预测腹腔镜nissen胃底折叠术后吞咽困难的发生。163例胃食管反流病患者接受了腹腔镜nissen胃底折叠术,中位随访时间为14个月(范围6至81个月)。37%(163例中的60例)患者术前存在吞咽困难,除5例患者外,其余患者的吞咽困难均得到缓解(92%)。女性(P = 0.01)和存在狭窄(P = 0.02)是与术前吞咽困难相关的仅有的术前变量。103例术前无吞咽困难的患者中有8%(8例)出现新发吞咽困难,其中63%(8例中的5例)食管下括约肌(LES)正常(压力>6 mmHg;长度>2 cm;腹段长度>1 cm)。LES正常的患者中,新发吞咽困难明显更为常见(22%[23例中的5例]对4%[80例中的3例],P = 0.01)。LES正常的患者发生吞咽困难的风险几乎是LES异常患者的6倍(相对风险 = 5.8)。仅术前LES正常(P = 0.02)或平均LES压力(P = 0.04)与术后吞咽困难的发生呈正相关。这种吞咽困难的严重程度也显示出与术前平均LES压力增加呈强烈的正相关趋势(P = 0.07)。最后,术前LES压力与术后LES压力显著相关(r = 0.48,P = 0.01),与平均残余LES(最低点)压力显著相关(r = 0.33,P = 0.05),这为这种吞咽困难的机制提供了见解。总之,术前LES参数在腹腔镜nissen胃底折叠术后吞咽困难的发生中起作用。LES正常或平均LES压力高的患者发生这种并发症的风险增加,在进行腹腔镜nissen胃底折叠术前应告知患者这一点。