Abstract

BackgroundThe outcomes of surgical interventions for achalasia treatment improved with the advent of minimally invasive surgery and the introduction of robotic surgery. This article describes the technical details of robotic achalasia surgery, shares our initial experiences, and discusses why robotic surgery will become the first choice for the surgical treatment of achalasia.MethodsThe records of patients with a diagnosis of achalasia who underwent robotic surgery were evaluated retrospectively. The patients’ data were examined in terms of demographic parameters, duration of complaints, treatment options applied previously, robotic surgery technique, and postoperative outcomes.ResultsOf the six patients evaluated, four (66.7%) were males and two (33.3%) were females. Their mean age was 32 years (20-51 years), and the mean symptom duration was 4.6 years (2-9 years). All of the patients underwent robotic Heller cardiomyotomy surgery. After the myotomy procedure, five of the six patients (83.3%) underwent partial anterior fundoplication (Dor) as an antireflux procedure. The cruroraphy procedure was performed in one patient (16.7%) due to accompanying hiatal hernia, whereas the procedures were completed in five patients (83.3%) without performing posterior dissection of the oesophagus. In the postoperative follow-up period, no surgical problem was encountered, while reflux symptoms developed in one patient (16.7%) and were controlled by medical therapy.ConclusionsThe success of surgical treatment of achalasia is incontrovertible. Due to the various advantages of robotic surgery, it is now frequently used in narrow-area surgeries, such as achalasia surgery.

Highlights

  • Achalasia cardia is a neurodegenerative motility disorder involving impaired oesophageal peristalsis and loss of lower oesophageal sphincter function [1]

  • The cruroraphy procedure was performed in one patient (16.7%) due to accompanying hiatal hernia, whereas the procedures were completed in five patients (83.3%) without performing posterior dissection of the oesophagus

  • Due to the various advantages of robotic surgery, it is frequently used in narrow-area surgeries, such as achalasia surgery

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Summary

Introduction

Achalasia cardia is a neurodegenerative motility disorder involving impaired oesophageal peristalsis and loss of lower oesophageal sphincter function [1]. Treatment options for patients with achalasia have two goals, namely reducing (various medical treatments and/or botulinum toxin injection) or destroying (endoscopic balloon dilatation and/or surgical treatment) the tonus of the lower oesophageal sphincter. The historical development continued with the application of the first balloon dilatation in 1887, description of surgical myotomy by Ernest Heller, incorporation of antireflux procedures in myotomy, introduction of minimally invasive surgery, per-oral endoscopic myotomy (POEM), and current robotic surgical procedures [3,4,5,6]. We describe here the technical details of robotic achalasia surgery and discuss why robotic surgery will become the first choice for the surgical treatment of achalasia. This article describes the technical details of robotic achalasia surgery, shares our initial experiences, and discusses why robotic surgery will become the first choice for the surgical treatment of achalasia

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