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Gastroparesis


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Free Gastroparesis Articles


New hiatal hernia research reported from Creighton University, Department of Surgery



2009 JUN 15 - (NewsRx.com) -- Research findings, 'Mesh complications after prosthetic reinforcement of hiatal closure: a 28-case series,' are discussed in a new report. According to a study from the United States, "Primary laparoscopic hiatal hernia repair is associated with up to a 42% recurrence rate. This has lead to the use of mesh for crural repair, which has resulted in an improved recurrence rate (0-24%)."

"However, mesh complications have been observed. We compiled two cases, and our senior author contacted other experienced esophageal surgeons who provided 26 additional cases with mesh-related complications. Care was taken to retrieve technical operative details concerning mesh size and shape and implantation technique used. Twenty-six patients underwent laparoscopic and two patients open surgery for large hiatal hernia (n=28). Twenty-five patients had a concomitant Nissen fundoplication, two a Toupet fundoplication, and one a Watson fundoplication. Mesh types placed were polypropylene (n=8), polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) (n=12), biological mesh (n=7), and dual mesh (n=1). Presenting symptoms associated with mesh complications were dysphagia (n=22), heartburn (n=10), chest pain (n=14), fever (n=1), epigastric pain (n=2), and weight loss (n=4). Main reoperative findings were intraluminal mesh erosion (n=17), esophageal stenosis (n=6), and dense fibrosis (n=5). Six patients required esophagectomy, two patients had partial gastrectomy, and 1 patient had total gastrectomy. Five patients did not require surgery. In this group one patient had mesh removal by endoscopy. There was no immediate postoperative mortality, however one patient has severe gastroparesis and five patients are dependent on tube feeding. Two patients died 3 months postoperatively of unknown cause. There is no apparent relationship between mesh type and configuration with the complications encountered. Complications related to synthetic mesh placement at the esophageal hiatus are more common than previously reported," wrote R.J. Stadlhuber and colleagues, Creighton University, Department of Surgery.

The researchers concluded: "Multicenter prospective studies are needed to determine the best method and type of mesh for implantation."

Stadlhuber and colleagues published the results of their research in Surgical Endoscopy (Mesh complications after prosthetic reinforcement of hiatal closure: a 28-case series. Surgical Endoscopy, 2009;23(6):1219-26).

For additional information, contact R.J. Stadlhuber, Creighton University School of Medicine, Dept. of Surgery, 601 N 30th Street, Suite 3740, Omaha, NE 68131-2197 USA..

The publisher of the journal Surgical Endoscopy can be contacted at: Springer, 233 Spring Street, New York, NY 10013, USA.

Keywords: United States, Omaha, Endoscopy, Hernia Repair, Hiatal Hernia, Surgery, Surgical Endoscopy.

This article was prepared by Gastroenterology Week editors from staff and other reports. Copyright 2009, Gastroenterology Week via NewsRx.com.

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