Abstract

Since January, 1972, the authors have operated upon 4 patients with idiopathic diffuse exophageal spasm. Clinical details and barium studies are included. Extramucosal myotomy extending from the gastric fundus to the aortic arch was done in each case. Pre- and postoperative manometric studies were carried out in all. After operation in each patient the dysphagia and substernal pain disappeared and in 3 patients radiological patterns changed. The myotomy was associated with marked fall of contractile wave pressures in the body of esophagus. The basal pressures of the esophageal body elevated, in 2 cases fell after the myotomy; in 2 with normal preoperative pressure it remained unchanged. At the lower esophageal sphincter the resting and yield pressures remained similar to the preoperative readings but the myotomy produced a disappearance of the relaxation and contraction pressure. The authors conclude that with myotomy they cannot correct the nature of the functional disorder but, by reducing the amplitude of the waves and lowering the resting pressure if elevated, they can relieve the patient's symptoms.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call