GERD Schwartz
GERD Schwartz
GERD Schwartz
• Define the disease by its symptoms: these symptoms are not specific for
GERD, and can be caused by other diseases such as achalasia, diffuse spasm,
esophageal carcinoma, pyloric stenosis, cholelithiasis, gastritis, gastric or
duodenal ulcer, and coronary artery disease.
The human Antireflux mechanism consists of a pump, the esophageal body motor
function, and a valve, the LES.
GERD – Schwartz 2004
First the valve: GERD starts in the stomach (Fig. 24-37). It is caused by gastric
distention due to overeating or ingestion of fried foods, typical of the Western diet,
which delays gastric emptying. Gastric distention causes unfolding of the sphincter
as it is taken up by the distended fundus and exposure of the terminal squamous
epithelium within the sphincter to noxious gastric juice. Signs of injury to the
exposed squamous epithelium are erosions, ulceration, fibrosis, and columnar
A hiatal hernia can also contribute to an esophageal propulsion defect due to loss of
anchorage of the esophagus in the abdomen. This results in a reduction in the
efficiency of acid clearance (Fig. 24-39). Kahrilas has shown that complete
esophageal emptying without retrograde flow was achieved in 86% of test swallows
in control subjects without a hiatal hernia, 66% in patients with a reducing hiatal
hernia, and only 32% in patients with a nonreducing hiatal hernia. Impaired
clearance in patients with nonreducing hiatal hernias suggests that the presence of
a hiatal hernia contributes to the pathogenesis of GERD.
The fact that the combination of refluxed gastric and duodenal juice is more noxious
to the esophageal mucosa than gastric juice alone may explain the repeated
observation that 25% of patients with reflux esophagitis develop recurrent and
progressive mucosal damage, often despite medical therapy. A potential reason is
that acid suppression therapy is unable to consistently maintain the pH of refluxed
gastric and duodenal juice above the range of 6. Lapses into pH ranges from 2 to 6
encourage the formation of undissociated, nonpolarized, soluble bile acids, which
are capable of penetrating the cell wall and injuring mucosal cells. To assure that
bile acids remain completely ionized in their polarized form, and thus unable to
penetrate the cell, requires that the pH of the refluxed material be maintained
above 7, 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, for the patient's lifetime. In practice this
would not only be impractical but likely impossible, unless very high doses of
medications were used. The use of lesser doses would allow esophageal mucosal
damage to occur while the patient was relatively asymptomatic. Antireflux
operative procedures re-establish the barrier between stomach and esophagus,
protecting the esophagus from damage in patients with mixed gastroesophageal
reflux.
MEDICAL THERAPY
Patients should be advised to elevate the head of the bed; avoid tight clothing; eat
small, frequent meals; avoid eating their nighttime meal shortly before retiring; lose
weight; and avoid alcohol, coffee, chocolate, and peppermint, which may aggravate
the symptoms.
rates associated with end-stage reflux disease. The approach should be to identify
risk factors for persistent and progressive disease early in the course of the disease,
and encourage surgical treatment when these factors are present. The following
approach is suggested.
GERD – Schwartz 2004
GERD – Schwartz 2004
• Complications:
PREOPERATIVE EVALUATION
PROCEDURE SELECTION
NISSEN FUNDOPLICATION
Modifications of the procedure as originally described. These include using only the
gastric fundus to envelop the esophagus in a fashion analogous to a Wetzel
jejunostomy, sizing the fundoplication with a 60F bougie, and limiting the length of
the fundoplication to 1 to 2 cm. The essential elements necessary for the
GERD – Schwartz 2004