Surgical treatment for achalasia: when should it be performed, and for which patients?
- نوع فایل : کتاب
- زبان : انگلیسی
- مؤلف : Hideyuki Kashiwagi, MD · Nobuo Omura, MD
- چاپ و سال / کشور: 2010
Description
Achalasia is a rare motor disorder of the esophagus, characterized by the absence of peristalsis and impaired swallow-induced relaxation. In the past decade, evidence has been accumulated suggesting that achalasia may be an immune-mediated infl ammatory disorder. With the advent of minimally invasive surgery, laparoscopic Heller myotomy (LHM) has slowly shifted the treatment of achalasia toward the greater use of surgical therapy. The goal of both surgical and nonsurgical treatment is to eliminate the outfl ow obstruction afforded by a nonrelaxing sphincter, relieving dysphagia and maintaining a barrier against gastroesophageal refl ux (GER). Endoscopic botulinum toxin injection (EBTI) is safe, easy to perform, inexpensive, and effective in aged patients, and it is especially effective when the lower esophageal pressure is hypertonic. This therapeutic option is reserved for patients too ill to undergo any surgical procedure. Pneumatic dilation (PD) has been shown to be an effective and inexpensive treatment with few adverse effects. The long-term success rate of PD seems to drop progressively over time. Heller myotomy (HM) has shown the best clinical effi cacy in achalasia as a fi rst-line treatment. Multiple endoscopic treatments are associated with poorer outcomes after HM. EBTI also makes LHM more diffi cult and results in a worse surgical outcome. The inferior symptomatic outcomes after thoracoscopic HM may be caused by thediffi culty in extending an adequate myotomy onto the stomach from the chest and the inability to create a fundoplication. LHM with Dor’s fundoplication (LHM + Dor) is effective and is safer procedure for avoiding GER, dysphagia, mucosal perforation, and a pseudodiverticulum. LHM + Dor is also effective in the presence of sigmoid achalasia, but the clinical result is not as good as nonsigmoid achalasia. A few patients need esophagectomy for surgical failure of HM. However, considering the risk of esophagectomy, LHM + Dor is the fi rst treatment option for patients with achalasia regardless of the degree of esophageal dilatation. This procedure is therefore considered to be an effective and safe treatment for patients of any age or with any condition.
Gen Thorac Cardiovasc Surg (2011) 59:389–398 DOI 10.1007/s11748-010-0765-x Received: 3 November 2010 / Accepted: 13 December 2010