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Esophageal Disasters and their Management: Lessons Learned

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Title: Esophageal Disasters and their Management: Lessons Learned


1
Esophageal Disasters and their Management
Lessons Learned
  • Scott B. Johnson, MD
  • Associate Professor
  • Cardiothoracic Surgery
  • UTHSCSA
  • Baptist CME Grand Rounds
  • February 13, 2007

2
Examples
  • Caustic ingestion
  • Esophageal perforations with and without
    fistulization
  • Longterm graft failure
  • Failure s/p previous multiple esophageal
    surgeries for benign disease

3
Important Considerations
  • Urgency of the situation/degree of acute
    illness
  • Phases of swallowing/patient expectations
  • Available reconstructive conduits and their
    intended route
  • What is the bail-out plan?
  • Life-expectancy/operative risk

4
Case Report 1
  • 24 y/o HF brought to ED with abdominal pain, s/p
    MVA 2wks prior, continued to deteriorate w/pH
    7.12.
  • Explored and found to have perforated, necrotic
    stomach and nonviable spleen.
  • Esophagus necrotic to pharynx

5
Surgery
  • THE, total gastrectomy, spit fistula, FCJ,
    tracheostomy
  • Conversion of spit fistula to tube pharyngostomy

6
Preoperative Studies
  • Endoscopy
  • Visceral angiogram

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Case Report 1 (cont.)
  • Endoscopy 4 months later revealed severely
    scarred epiglottis and hypopharynx
    cricopharyngeous obliterated

8
Pharyngeal phase of swallowing Physiology
  • 1. CNs V, VII, IX, X, XII
  • 2. Motor neurons C1 - C3
  • 3. Swallowing center (Medulla)

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PHYSIOLOGY
  • Tongue pharynx (pharyngeal phase)
  • 1. Soft palate/larynx elevates
  • 2. Tongue moves posteriorly
  • 3. Epiglottis tilts backward
  • 4. Posterior pharyngeal constrictors
    contract
  • 5. Cricopharyngeus relaxes
  • 6. Food bolus propelled into the esophagus

10
Special considerations
  • Loss of stomach as a conduit
  • Proximal scarring
  • Reconstruction to pharynx necessary
  • Alteration of pharyngeal phase of swallowing was
    inevitable
  • Unclear extent of injury to colon pedicle if any

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Surgery Performed
  • Substernal colon interposition with creation of a
    colopharyngostomy, Roux-en-Y colojejunostomy,
    revision of FCJ

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Available Conduits
  • Colon
  • Good size match
  • Durable blood supply
  • Three anastomoses

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Johnson SB. DeMeester TR. Esophagectomy for
benign disease use of the colon. Advances in
Surgery. 27317-34, 1994.
15
Johnson SB. DeMeester TR. Esophagectomy for
benign disease use of the colon. Advances in
Surgery. 27317-34, 1994.
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Johnson SB. DeMeester TR. Esophagectomy for
benign disease use of the colon. Advances in
Surgery. 27317-34, 1994.
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Principles of Management
  • Important to personally perform endoscopy
  • Determine extent of proximal injury/scarring
  • Map out proximal anastomotic site in cases of
    complete esophageal and pharyngeal involvement
  • Counsel the patient w/r/t phases of swallowing
    and postoperative expectations
  • Know conduit to be used and route

24
Principles of Management (cont.)
  • Steroids controversial
  • Antibiotics controversial
  • Dilutions - controversial

25
Speech Therapy
  • Therapeutic approaches to the management of
    pharyngeal dysphagia involve
  • postural changes
  • modification of respiration
  • swallowing techniques
  • food consistency
  • thermal stimulation.

Volume 106(2) Supplement 78, February 1996, pp
1-12
26
Speech Therapy (cont.)
  • Application of these techniques alters the way in
    which gravity maneuvers the bolus through the
    pharynx by accomplishing the following
  • preventing the bolus from entering the airway
  • strengthening base of tongue and the pharyngeal
    wall approximation
  • increasing the strength and duration of vocal
    cord closure before and during the swallow by the
    application of extrinsic pressure

Volume 106(2) Supplement 78, February 1996, pp
1-12
27
Other Available Conduits
  • Stomach
  • Least number of anastomoses
  • Small bowel
  • Pedicled graft may only reach to the pulmonary
    hilum
  • Free flap to the cervical esophagus/pharynx
  • Supercharged grafts

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Case report 2
  • 53 y/o WF transferred in from OH for TE fistula
    resulting from a traumatic percutaneous
    tracheostomy
  • PSH significant for several ex laps for
    malrotation/SBO, biliary leak, SB resections
  • Lives with her parents, IQ lt 80.

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grand rounds.mpg
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Operation
  • Right thoracotomy, division of TE fistula with
    primary repair of trachea and esophagus LD
    interpositional rotational flap

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Principles of Management
  • Variety of surgical options available to repair a
    TEF
  • direct closure of the tracheal and esophageal
    defects with or without pedicled muscle flaps
  • tracheal closure with an esophageal patch
  • segmental tracheal resection, and anastomosis
    with esophageal closure
  • esophageal diversion

The Journal of Thoracic Cardiovascular Surgery
Volume 119(2), February 2000, pp 268-276
42
Principles of Management (cont.)
  • Esophageal injuries may be primarily reparable
    regardless of timeline
  • Even though you may want to run the other way,
    sometimes the most dreaded cases turn out to be
    the most gratifying

43
Volume 27(8), August 1999, pp 1617-1625
44
Case Report 3
  • 41 y/o RN s/p accidental lye ingestion as a
    toddler, s/p substernal colonic interposition,
    now with right sided chest discomfort and
    dysphagia associated with eating

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Additional Work Up
  • Endoscopy
  • Mesenteric Arteriography

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Surgery Performed
  • Median sternotomy
  • Identification of colonic pedicle
  • Resection of redundant colon
  • Primary anastomosis

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gt10cm
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Principles of Management
  • Isoperistaltic interpositions preferred due to
    possible development of complications later in
    life
  • Swallowing in these patients will never be
    normal
  • Revision of existing conduits is possible, so
    long as one has adequate knowledge and provides
    protection of blood supply
  • Video esophagography provides useful information
    regarding both anatomy and function
  • Literature lacking w/r/t revision of existing
    conduits

60
Case Report 4
  • 49 y/o WM transferred from San Angelo for
    suspected esophageal perforation.
  • One day PTA noted episode of food becoming
    lodged in esophagus with subsequent hematemesis
    followed immediately with bilateral parasternal
    chest pain radiating to bilateral shoulders and
    back between the scapulae
  • Patient noted approximately one year history of
    difficult swallowing both solids and liquids.

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Operation Performed
  • Esophagoscopy left thoracotomy with
    decortication esophagectomy with creation of end
    cervical esophagostomy Stamm gastrostomy and
    feeding jejunostomy

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Postoperative course
  • Patient did well, was eventually discharged home
    on tube feeds. Returned three months later
    desiring reconstruction
  • At that time, esophageal reconstruction was
    performed using substernal stomach

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Principles of Management
  • Causes of esophageal perforation
  • intraluminal instrumentation (68)
  • spontaneous rupture (13)
  • foreign bodies (11)
  • trauma (7)
  • Diagnosis requires high index of suspicion
  • Missed injury carries high mortality
  • Non-operative management can be done in selected
    cases

Michel L, Grillo HC, Malt RA. Operative and
nonoperative management of esophageal
perforations. Ann Surg. 19811945763
69
Principles of Management
  • Esophageal resection with delayed reconstruction
    a good option when significant sepsis present
    and primary repair not possible
  • Previous G-tube does NOT negate the use of
    stomach as a conduit
  • Timing of reconstruction should be individualized

70
Case Report 5
  • 72 y/o WF referred from private surgeon with
    history of 3 prior laparoscopic Nissen procedures
    for hiatal hernia repair since 1995, last one
    2002 with mesh, who was symptom free for 3-4
    years until she developed dysphagia, odynophagia,
    esophageal spasm, epigastric pain, nausea, and
    bloating.
  • She has to sleep on 2-3 pillows to prevent
    regurgitation at night.

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Stationary manometry
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Operation Performed
  • Left thoracotomy with takedown and reduction of
    previous Nissen, takedown of left hemidiaphragm
    with lysis of adhesions, reconstruction of
    esophageal hiatus with redo transthoracic Nissen
    Fundoplication EGD

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Hunter Ann Surg, Volume 223(6).June 1996.673-687
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Reoperative fundoplications are effective
treatment for dysphagia and recurrent
gastroesophageal reflux
  • Seventy-nine per cent of patients with reflux
    prior to reoperation, 100 per cent with
    dysphagia, and 74 per cent with both noted
    excellent or good outcomes after reoperation
  • Failure leading to reoperation was due to hiatal
    failure in 28 per cent, wrap failure in 19 per
    cent, both in 33 per cent, and slipped Nissen
    fundoplication in 20 per cent.

Rosemurgy et al, American Surgeon.
70(12)1061-7, 2004 Dec.
82
Principles of Management
  • Successful reoperative esophageal surgery
    performed for benign disease may require
    maximally invasive techniques
  • Entrance into the abdomen can be achieved
    through take-down of the diaphragm radially
  • Esophageal conservation preferred whenever
    possible

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In Summary
  • A proper and thorough preoperative evaluation
    should be performed before any major esophageal
    surgery is contemplated
  • Video esophagography
  • Endoscopy
  • Stationary manometry
  • CT scanning

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Flying J Ranch
Where the combination of alcohol, tobacco, and
firearms is encouraged!
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