Two months later, the patient presented with shortness of breath followed by nausea and forceful vomiting. He had eaten a heavy dinner of wheat rice and lamb meat followed by extra food at night. A nasogastric tube (NG) tube was inserted. The chest X-ray exhibited an air fluid level in the right chest (Figure 1). Upper gastrointestinal endoscopy showed a tight cardia, a large amount of retained gastric fluid, and a lack of passage through the pylorus. A computed tomography (CT) scan showed the migration of the stomach and colon to the right chest via the ruptured hiatal repair (Figure 2).
Figure 1: An air fluid level is noted in the right chest due to a dilated stomach.
Figure 2: The stomach, omentum, and colon is seen in the right chest.
A reoperation was performed which included a full left posterolateral thoracotomy. There was severe fibrosis around the prior repair site, but the fundoplication sutures were intact. The hiatal sutures were ruptured posteriorly resulting in the herniation. Our observation was that the stomach had rolled over itself posteriorly and had become entirely herniated into the right hemithorax. This also pulled the splenic flexure of the colon and omentum (Figure 2). We reduced the herniated contents and performed a reinforced repair of the diaphragmatic cruri using prolene mesh. The patient was discharged on the seventh postoperative day. Currently, he is asymptomatic at 15 months and tolerates a full diet without any reflux.
In addition to excessive suture line tension on the esophagus, hernia recurrence after hiatal repair is precipitated by sudden rises in intra-abdominal pressure.[1] In our case, the vomiting generated enough force to push the entire stomach and a part of the colon through the hiatus to the contralateral chest cavity. These recurrences are likely due to forceful vomiting in the early postoperative period and usually occur following motor vehicle accidents.[1,3] We routinely prescribe anti-emetic medications in the first two weeks and advise patients to avoid any excessive rise in intraabdominal pressure resulting from such things as weight lifting (>5 kg), vomiting, or constipation during the first six months. Our patient did continue his medication but did not follow the dietary restrictions.
During our initial operation, our patient had severe adhesions on the left side resulting from his previous pneumonia attacks. This may have prevented the abdominal contents from herniating into the left chest. A left posterolateral thoracotomy always provides excellent exposure to the left chest and upper abdomen in those cases.[8]
The type and mechanism of hernia recurrence may vary largely among individual cases as it did with the patient in this study. Avoidance of sudden rises in intra-abdominal pressure is critical for preventing these complications.
Declaration of conflicting interests
The authors declared no conflicts of interest with respect
to the authorship and/or publication of this article.
Funding
The authors received no financial support for the
research and/or authorship of this article.
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