Tsukada K, Yoshida K, Hatakeyama K, Muto T
Department of Surgery, Niigata University School of Medicine.
Hepatogastroenterology. 1997 May-Jun;44(15):716-23.
BACKGROUND/AIMS: Surgery remains the most reliable treatment for bleeding esophageal varices. The aim of this study was to introduce the operative technique of transthoraco-phrenic esophageal transection with paraesophagogastric devascularization using a stapler and to evaluate surgical results.
Forty-five patients underwent the procedure; an elective procedure was performed in 22 patients (bleeders) and a prophylactic procedure in 23 patients (nonbleeders). Twenty-nine patients were classified as Child's A, 15 as B and 1 as C. Previous sclerotherapy had been performed in 5 patients.
No hospital deaths occurred. No patients developed postoperative anastomotic leakage, encephalopathy, or any complications related to phrenicotomy. Three patients bled postoperatively from recurrent esophageal varices. Cumulative 5-year bleeding rates were 5.0% in bleeders and 6.6% in non-bleeders. Two patients died due to bleeding varices. Cumulative 5-year survival rates were 72.1% and 78.8% in patients classified as Child's A and Child's B, respectively.
This procedure may be indicated for a majority of Child's A or B patients. Although the advantages of this procedure must be evaluated further, it may be an alternative when injection sclerotherapy and endoscopic ligation fail.