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Additional fundophrenicopexia, after Nissen fundoplication, reduces postoperative dysphagia and re-operation rate in the long-term follow up.

AbstractBACKGROUND:
Various technical modifications of Nissen fundoplication (NF) that aim to improve patients' outcomes have been discussed. This study aims to evaluate the effect of division of the short gastric vessels (SGV) and the addition of a standardized fundophrenicopexia on the postoperative outcome after NF.
METHODS:
283 consecutive patients with GERD treated with NF were divided into four groups following consecutive time periods: with division of the SGV and without fundophrenicopexia (group A), with division of the SGV and with fundophrenicopexia (group B), without division of the SGV and with fundophrenicopexia (group C) and without division of the SGV and without fundophrenicopexia (group D). Postoperative contrast swallow, dysphagia scoring, GEDR-HRQL and proton pump inhibitor intake were evaluated. A comparative analysis of patients with division of the SGV and those without (161 A + B vs. 122 C + D), and patients with fundophrenicopexia and those without (78 A vs. 83 B and 49 C vs. 73 D) was performed.
RESULTS:
Fundophrenicopexia reduced postoperative dysphagia rates (0 group C vs. 5 group D, p = 0.021) in patients where the SGV were preserved and reoperation rates (1 group B vs. 7 group A, p = 0.017) in patients where the SGV were divided. There was no significant difference in the postoperative rates of heartburn relief, dysphagia, gas bloating syndrome, interventions, re-fundoplication and the GERD-HRQL score between groups A + B and C + D, respectively.
CONCLUSION:
Standardized additional fundophrenicopexia in patients undergoing Nissen fundoplication significantly reduces postoperative dysphagia in patients without division of the SGV and reoperation rates in patients with division of the SGV. Division of the SGV has no influence on the postoperative outcome of NF.
AuthorsMilena Nikolic, Aleksa Matic, Ivan Kristo, Matthias Paireder, Reza Asari, Bogdan Osmokrovic, Georg Semmler, Sebastian F Schoppmann
JournalSurgical endoscopy (Surg Endosc) Vol. 36 Issue 5 Pg. 3019-3027 (05 2022) ISSN: 1432-2218 [Electronic] Germany
PMID34159461 (Publication Type: Journal Article, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't)
Copyright© 2021. The Author(s).
Topics
  • Deglutition Disorders (etiology, prevention & control, surgery)
  • Follow-Up Studies
  • Fundoplication (adverse effects)
  • Gastroesophageal Reflux (etiology, surgery)
  • Humans
  • Laparoscopy
  • Reoperation
  • Treatment Outcome

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