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Gastrobronchial fistula after sleeve gastrectomy and gastric bypass: endoscopic management and prevention.

Authors :
Campos JM
Pereira EF
Evangelista LF
Siqueira L
Neto MG
Dib V
Falcão M
Arantes V
Awruch D
Albuquerque W
Ettinger J
Ramos A
Ferraz Á
Source :
Obesity surgery [Obes Surg] 2011 Oct; Vol. 21 (10), pp. 1520-9.
Publication Year :
2011

Abstract

Gastrobronchial fistula (GBF) is a serious complication following bariatric surgery, whose treatment by thoracotomy and/or laparotomy involves a high morbidity rate. We present the outcomes of endoscopic management for GBF as a helpful technique for its healing process. This is a multicenter retrospective study of 15 patients who underwent gastric bypass (n = 10) and sleeve gastrectomy (n = 5) and presented GBF postoperatively (mean of 6.7 months). Ten patients developed lung abscess and were treated by antibiotic therapy (n = 10) and thoracotomy (n = 3). Abdominal reoperation was performed in nine patients for abscess drainage (n = 9) and/or ring removal (n = 4) and/or nutritional access (n = 6). The source of the GBF was at the angle of His (n = 14). Furthermore, 14 patients presented a narrowing of the gastric pouch treated by 20 or 30 mm aggressive balloon dilation (n = 11), stricturotomy or septoplasty (n = 10) and/or stent (n = 7). Fibrin glue was used in one patient. We performed, on average, 4.5 endoscopic sessions per patient. Endotherapy led to a 93.3% (14 out of 15) success rate in GBF closure with an average healing time of 4.4 months (range, 1-10 months), being shorter in the stent group (2.5 × 9.5 months). There was no recurrence during the average 27.3-month follow-up. A patient persisted with GBF, despite the fibrin glue application, and decided to discontinue it. GBF is a highly morbid complication, which usually arises late in the postoperative period. Endotherapy through different strategies is a highly effective therapeutic option and should be implemented early in order to shorten leakage healing time.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1708-0428
Volume :
21
Issue :
10
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Obesity surgery
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
21643779
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11695-011-0444-8