Guest guest Posted May 17, 2011 Report Share Posted May 17, 2011 wrote: > > I like it when I can read clear data that define " success " . > Yes, it has been a problem in comparing dilatation studies to myotomy studies. Also, most studies being about just dilatation or just myotomy there could be a question about how the subjects for each were selected. In this study they studied both and randomly assigned patients to treatment options so the two groups should be very similar. One thing to note is that they were not just studying just any kind of dilatation but a specific dilatation protocol where the patient has two dilatations one to three weeks apart. I would say that is a " graded " dilatation protocol. Not every one that does dilatation does graded dilatations or does graded dilatation that way. For the surgery I don't see what the protocol was. We know different surgeons do things differently. Some like to cut longer onto the the stomach than others. Some do different fundoplications and there are things that can be done or not done to straighten the esophagus. Some of those point may be covered in the full report but I only found the abstract online: Pneumatic dilation versus laparoscopic Heller's myotomy for idiopathic achalasia http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21561346 Also, the main comparison between the groups were their outcomes at two years. It would be nice to see the 5 and 10 year outcomes, or more. Even so, this study goes a long way toward showing that for many dilatation, at least graded dilatation, can be a good option. > > http://www.medpagetoday.com/Pulmonology/GeneralPulmonary/26467 > > Action Points > > * Point out that this study found that achalasia outcomes with > laparoscopic myotomy were not superior to those with pneumatic > dilation and suggest that graded dilation is a reasonable protocol for > pneumatic dilation. > > * Note that there was a greater need for redilation in patients > younger than 40 in the pneumatic-dilation group which may suggest that > younger patients should be treated preferentially with laporoscopic > myotomy. > Young male patient were especially noted as possibly doing better with surgery. That has been found in other studies also. I have to wonder if a sigmoid or dilated esophagus made a difference. In the abstract they indicate that with the surgery patients the LES pressure tended to be less and the hight of barium in timed barium was shorter. They didn't find those results to be statistically significant but in my mind the two seem likely to go together and that would be in line with some other studies. If so, I would think that could make a difference in difficult cases like sigmoid or dilated esophagus. notan Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 17, 2011 Report Share Posted May 17, 2011 Dear " A " Group, I am just curious if there has been a study or survey done here with the group to compare a lap Heller myotomy with fundo verses a VATS heller myotomy. Here are my specific questions: After a Lap Heller Myotomy with fundo there seems to be problems where another myotomy is required, acid reflux, esophagectomy, or other Achalasia symptoms...is this true? For how many? How many years can you expect to live " normally " or eat normally after this procedure? Now the same questions with a VATS heller myotomy? Has anyone had this procedure followed by more problems or more surgeries? I would think that people would want to pick the surgery with the most lasting results. I don't know a lot about this...just looking for info. Marci Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 17, 2011 Report Share Posted May 17, 2011 Hi Marci, Good idea! In my own personal research, I have found that both Vats ( which does not have a wrap) and Heller Myotomy with fundo, could have similar outcomes. Much depends on the surgeon doing it and much depends on the patient and what condition they are dealing with. The Vats has no fundo/wrap, so many of these patients can have reflex problems because it depends on the surgeon to do it just right! Then again, many with the wrap can have problems with reflex and/or the wrap is done to tight and they still will have swallowing issues, or if done to loose then it's the reflex.....it's a gamble that is why the surgeon is the key, MHO! I can only speak for myself, when I met with my surgeon at UCLA, we had a LONG face to face talk. I asked her if she immediately started her patients on antacid medications after surgery. She said no because most of her patients didn't need it. That gave me some hope. I also asked her how she did the " cut " (this was too see if she knew how to do a complete cut), she answered me in detail of why she cuts and how long the cut needs to be for achalasia patients to benefit. I also asked her how long this surgery can last, I figured maybe like 10yrs or more. She told me, you are DONE, this should be it for you!!! That sounded extremely good. Of course my case is my case, we are all different. I had the Heller/Dor and have been doing great. I had A for 22yrs prior to surgery and could barely swallow water when I finally got to her!!! An interesting fact that I learned during my research was that a surgeon that does a specific surgery will learn the most after they have done at least 50 (that is the learning curve), most mistakes will take place at that time. That is why we say have a GREAT doctor, one that does hundreds of these rare surgeries. Julee So Calif. ________________________________ From: Marcene Rainey <marcenerainey@...> achalasia Sent: Tue, May 17, 2011 10:21:14 AM Subject: Re: MedPage Today on Dilation vs. Surgery  Dear " A " Group, I am just curious if there has been a study or survey done here with the group to compare a lap Heller myotomy with fundo verses a VATS heller myotomy. Here are my specific questions: After a Lap Heller Myotomy with fundo there seems to be problems where another myotomy is required, acid reflux, esophagectomy, or other Achalasia symptoms...is this true? For how many? How many years can you expect to live " normally " or eat normally after this procedure? Now the same questions with a VATS heller myotomy? Has anyone had this procedure followed by more problems or more surgeries? I would think that people would want to pick the surgery with the most lasting results. I don't know a lot about this...just looking for info. Marci Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 17, 2011 Report Share Posted May 17, 2011 Marci wrote: > > I am just curious if there has been a study or survey done here with the > group to compare a lap Heller myotomy with fundo verses a VATS > heller > myotomy. > There actually have been a number of them. First understand that there is not much difference in the myotomy in that they are both an incision along the esophagus at the LES through the muscle layers. The VATS myotomy starts a little higher on the esophagus and does not go as far down onto the stomach. That is because the myotomy is done inside the chest and the LES is in, and filling, the hiatus (opening) of the diaphragm between the chest and the abdomen. With VATS it is easier to extend the myotomy higher but harder to extend it lower. With laparoscopic the myotomy is done inside the abdomen. The stomach is easy to get to by lap but it is harder to extend the myotomy higher above the LES. So, the myotomy is in the same place on the LES but extends up or down a little depending on if it is VATS or lap. Here is a study that looked at eight others. Can thoracoscopic Heller's myotomy give equivalent results to the more usual laparoscopic Heller's myotomy in the treatment of achalasia? http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21498789 " The overall postoperative morbidity of THM is not significantly different from that of LHM. An advantage of LHM over THM that is demonstrated is that LHM offers a shorter hospital stay and reduced operative time. " One of the studies look at in the above study was this one: Endoscopic and Surgical Treatments for Achalasia A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis http://gidiv.ucsf.edu/course/things/Campos.pdf Look at the tables in that study 5 to 8. 5 and 6 are for open Transabdomina and open Transthoracic. 7 and 8 are Thoracoscopic and Laparoscopic. I like being able to compare the open versions because one of the arguments that come up is that one version gives a better view than another. The view going open are as good as it gets as far a access goes. The image on a screen can at times actually be better than what you can get with your eye though. Either way, we have both results here. One of the claims that comes up, by some, is that a VATS myotomy does not need a fundoplication because it is up higher. The test of this is how much GastroEsophageal Reflux (GER) there is. The tables show the GER results. It has been implied, by one author, that the VATS surgeons may be guilty of making a conclusion of convenience because it would be hard to add a fundoplication to a VATS myotomy. If you believe in fundoplication you are going to do it open or lap. You will notice that the table for Thoracoscopic has no column for " with fundoplication. " A criticism of the studies above is that they rely on old data and new techniques in VATS and lap are not being compared. Studies can only tell what has been done and with achalasia a lot of centers are going to have to take some time to have enough subjects to study and follow-up. Here is a relatively recent abstract of a long-term study on VATS. Long-term clinical results of thoracoscopic Heller's myotomy in the treatment of achalasia. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18490172 It was published in 2008 but some of the surgeries go back to 1992. He makes the conclusion, based on his fifty-six patients, that VATS results in less GER. He has a result of 16.9% with GER but it is not clear to me if all were tested or just those that complained. Compare that 16.9% to the results in table 7 in the other study. There only one VATS study had a result that low and the mean was 28.3% and went as high as 60%. So, do you take his conclusion based on just his patients or do you take the results of other surgeons into the conclusion as they do in the above studies. Also, is 16.9% low enough that you want to risk going without a fundoplication? The mean for lap in table 8 was only 14.9% with a fundoplication and 31.5 without (not much different from 28.3%). It isn't like VATS means no risk of GER or that lap guarantees GER. One thing you probably would get with VATS is a harder recovery and more time in the hospital. Now some patients and surgeons may claim that there is a special technique (as far as I can tell unpublished) by which curtain surgeons can get just the right VATS myotomy to enable swallowing while preventing GER without the need for a fundoplication. They say you can't compare the result of other VATS surgeons to these VATS surgeons. ... Maybe. To me GER is the nut to crack here. If VATS is not better for GER then why have it? If you don't want a fundoplication you can have a myotomy done lap without one. Some lap surgeons do not believe in myotomies either. Even so they still choose to do their myotomies lap not VATS. So, the questions to be asked are: is VATS better than lap without a fundoplication and do you need or want a fundoplication? Remember that the myotomy is really not different either way. Just extended a little up or down. Sometimes we are told that often the fundoplication becomes to tight and needs to be undone. I just don't see that being the case in the published studies. Yes it does happen but it is not nearly the main reason for myotomy failure. To me it seems, from reading studies, that GER and incomplete myotomies are the main causes of myotomy failure. So, you have to weigh the risk of the myotomy with fundoplication going bad because of the fundoplication or GER against the myotomy failing because of GER due to a lack of fundoplication. I worded it that way because a myotomy with fundoplication can still go bad due to GER. A fundoplication may become looser over time allowing more GER. Some surgeons feel strongly that a fundoplication should be done. Some feel that a fundoplication should not be done. Of those some of them use lap and some use VATS but neither can guarantee that you will not get GER they just believe long-term the risks are less even with the risk of GER. Some lap surgeons believe that extending the myotomy more onto the stomach reduces problems swallowing and reduces the number of incomplete myotomies. Other lap surgeons feel that it increases the chances of GER. Those that don't do a fundoplication may do less of the myotomy on the stomach making the myotomy shorter which may increase the chances of it failing because of being incomplete. Understand that the top of the stomach also functions as part of the LES. It adds to the pressure at the LES and also helps to block GER as the LES is suppose to do. VATS can't extend as far onto the stomach but they still have to make sure they get the pressure at the LES low enough. Their method of doing that is by extending it higher. It seems to work but it isn't clear that it works as well in all cases. When a dilatation is done the muscle of the esophagus in the LES are stretched until they start to break their fibers. The muscle of the stomach that are part of the LES are not stretched as much and don't break their fibers. Dilatation are known for not having as much GER problems, perhaps because these stomach muscles remain untreated. Dilatations are also know to often not be as successful, possibly because these muscles are untreated. But graded dilatation seems to do well but long-term studies are needed to better compare it with surgery. In the earlier post today about graded dilatation that study found a 15% occurrence of GER even in the dilatation patients. So even dilatation does not guarantee much lower occurrence of GER. It makes it hard to draw conclusions and the best that one may be able to do is look at the studies using the old data. Remember too that one can always treat GER with medication though there are risks with that option too. notan Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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