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Oxford University Press, British Journal of Surgery, 8(92), p. 996-1001, 2005

DOI: 10.1002/bjs.4914

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Symptomatic and functional outcome after laparoscopic reoperation for failed antireflux surgery

Journal article published in 2005 by J. P. Byrne, B. M. Smithers ORCID, L. K. Nathanson, I. Martin, H. S. Ong, D. C. Gotley
This paper was not found in any repository, but could be made available legally by the author.
This paper was not found in any repository, but could be made available legally by the author.

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Abstract

Abstract Background The aim was to determine symptomatic and functional outcome after reoperative antireflux surgery for recurrent reflux, persistent dysphagia and severe gas bloat, using a primarily laparoscopic surgical approach. Methods This was a retrospective analysis of prospectively collected data from 118 patients, of whom 70 had reoperative surgery for recurrent reflux, 35 for dysphagia and 13 for gas bloat. DeMeester scores before and 1 year after surgery, functional symptoms after surgery and overall patient satisfaction were analysed. Results Reoperation was completed laparoscopically in 101 patients (85·6 per cent), in 28 after previous open hiatal surgery. The operation was converted from an initial laparoscopic approach to open surgery in 17 patients. One-year follow-up data were available for 104 patients (88·1 per cent). After reoperation for recurrent reflux, 84 per cent had a DeMeester heartburn score of zero or one, and 87 per cent had a regurgitation score of zero or one. After reoperation for dysphagia, 21 of 32 patients had a dysphagia score of zero or one, with improvement observed in 25. All patients undergoing reoperation for severe gas bloat were satisfied with the outcome 1 year after operation. Conclusion Revisional surgery for recurrent reflux using a laparoscopic approach offered high rates of success and patient satisfaction. Swallowing returned to normal in two-thirds of patients after reoperation.