Herein, we present the diagnosis and treatment of a patient who had a herniation of the stomach into the chest followed by the perforation of the stomach within the early period after laparoscopic Nissen fundoplication.
Figure 1: A chest X-ray of the patient after a tube thoracostomy.
An endoscopic examination showed a perforated stomach along with lung parenchyma. The chest tube was visible through the perforated area. A left thoracotomy revealed that the fundus of the stomach was edematous and that it had totally herniated into the chest. In addition, its venous circulation was also disrupted, and the stomach was perforated as well (Figure 2). However, all of the fundoplication sutures were detached, and the perforated part of the stomach measuring approximately 5 cm in diameter was primarily repaired. The stomach was so edematous that it could not be pushed into the abdominal cavity; therefore, the esophageal hiatus was enlarged via a phrenotomy. Afterwards the stomach was placed into the abdomen from this hiatal orifice. Next, the phrenotomy was primarily closed with nonabsorbable suture material to narrow the hiatus, and this was followed by copious irrigation of the chest cavity. Two chest tubes were then inserted. The chest incision was closed, but no drainage tube was inserted into the abdominal cavity. Furthermore, no leakage was noted on the esophagogastrography taken on the postoperative fourth day. Oral enteral nutrition was initiated on the postoperative fifth day with no complications. The remainder of the postoperative course was uneventful, and the patient was doing well two months after the surgery.
Incarceration, strangulation, and perforation may occur in conjunction with wrap herniation, and all reported cases of gastric perforations after laparoscopic Nissen fundoplication have been caused by this condition.[1] A ccording to Huguet,[8] possible mechanisms responsible for these gastric perforations include full-thickness ulceration caused by the suture material or the use of Teflon pledgets to secure the fundoplication, whereas the presumed cause has been late herniation associated with ischemia. In the literature, cases of gastric herniation and perforation after Nissen fundoplication have been reported in the late postoperative second week.[1,8] However, in our case, the complaints started on the postoperative third day, and the gastric perforation occurred on the postoperative fifth day. The dysphagia and abdominal pain, which started on postoperative third day, were considered to be the result of the herniation of the gastric wrap into the chest. We believe that the reason for the sudden relief and disappearance of the dysphagia on the postoperative fifth day was due to the disruption of the 360° Nissen fundoplication followed by the gastric perforation. In the laparoscopic Nissen procedure, fixation stitches may be placed between the crura and the wrap, but we do not usually do this if there is no laxity in the hiatus and no paraesophageal hernia is observed preoperatively during the investigation via a Barium evaluation and laparoscopy. Since the presented case was primary in nature, and no factors existed that could have complicated the procedure, such as a short esophagus, achalasia, previous surgery, or adhesion, the procedure was completed without any difficulty. However, the esophageal hiatus was determined to be loose when explored during the thoracotomy, and closure was accomplished via a narrowing procedure with non-absorbable material after the phrenotomy.
An endoscopic examination is significant for evaluating symptoms after fundoplication. If the entire fundoplication has herniated above the diaphragm but remains in position at the gastroesophageal junction, an endoscopy will show it to be intact, even though the fundoplication and a portion of the proximal stomach will be above the diaphragmatic pinch across the stomach. This can be recognized by a concentric narrowing that moves with respiration. In addition, paraesophageal hernias are identified by a pouch of stomach extending above the diaphragm, either through or around the fundoplication.[4] In our case, an endoscopic investigation was performed in order to reveal the herniation since it can be easily overlooked because of the higher pressure and increase in the faucial reflex. Lung parenchyma and the chest tube were observed through the perforated gastric fundus that had herniated into the chest. The diagnosis of herniation and the localization of the perforation were thus confirmed by the endoscopic examination.
We believe that the wide perforation in this case occurred because of the blast effect from the increased gastric pressure due to the excessive faucial reflex, the vomiting associated with the herniation, and the edema that resulted from ischemia. The endoscopic examination revealed both the diagnosis of the herniation and the exact localization of the perforation. Hence, surgical intervention was performed before broad ischemia and infection could take place, and healing occurred over a short period of time.
Patients undergoing a laparoscopic Nissen fundoplication may complain from nausea and vomiting in the early postoperative period. Severe vomiting in these cases should alert the surgeon to the possibility of intrathoracic wrap herniation and a perforated stomach.
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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