Abstract

Median arcuate ligament syndrome (MALS) is a clinical entity that has historically been met with significant equipoise on how to diagnose and treat the constellation of symptoms. Our objective was to describe distinct patient outcomes following open median arcuate ligament release and complete celiac plexus neurolysis in patients diagnosed with MALS. We performed a prospective analysis of patients referred for MALS at a single institution between February 2020 and January 2022. We assessed duplex ultrasound studies, abdominal computed tomography angiography results, celiac plexus nerve block procedures, and patient reported questionnaires. Patients who experienced symptomatic relief from celiac plexus nerve block were offered surgical release and neurolysis. Their preoperative and postoperative health and quality of life measures were assessed using the 36-item Short-Form Health Survey (RAND). There were 75 patients who were referred for MALS and 29 patients (39%) underwent surgery. Duplex ultrasound examination revealed a significant increase in celiac artery peak systolic velocity at end-expiration (211 cm/s to 276 cm/s), with only 55% having a J-hooked appearance of the celiac artery on computed tomography angiography. All patients underwent transgastric celiac plexus block with a combination of bupivacaine and triamcinolone. After nerve block, surgical patients had a mean relief of 207 hours (48-1008 hours) from their symptoms. Postoperatively, 16 patients completed the 36-item Short-Form Health Survey with significant improvement noted in each category of the questionnaire (Fig 1). Significant quality of life improvement can also be appreciated in Fig 2. Surgical patients had an average weight gain of 8.8 kg (range, 1.3-34 kg) at a mean follow-up of 8 months. There were no perioperative wound healing complications. Our data suggest that patients who are carefully selected for median arcuate ligament release and neurolysis have significant improvement in quality of life and benefit from surgery. Wide surgical neurolysis of the celiac plexus is critical and the same diagnostic imaging findings are not consistent across all patients. Celiac plexus neurolysis is required for accurate patient selection.Fig 2Averages in each domain of the 36-item Short-Form Health Survey.View Large Image Figure ViewerDownload Hi-res image Download (PPT)

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