Back to Search Start Over

Bile Reflux Scintigraphy After Mini-Gastric Bypass

Authors :
Tuure Saarinen
Miia Pitkonen
Antti Loimaala
Anne Juuti
Marja Leivonen
Jarmo A. Salo
Jari Räsänen
Clinicum
II kirurgian klinikka
Department of Surgery
HUS Abdominal Center
III kirurgian klinikka
HUS Heart and Lung Center
University of Helsinki
Department of Diagnostics and Therapeutics
HUS Medical Imaging Center
Department of Physics
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Significant weight-loss and diabetes remission have been reported after mini-gastric bypass (MGB). Concern has been raised regarding postoperative bile reflux (BR), but it has not been demonstrated in previous studies. We set out to find out if BR is evident in hepatobiliary scintigraphy after MGB. Nine consecutive patients, seven with type 2 diabetes, underwent MGB (15 cm gastric tube, 250-275 cm biliary limb) at our institution with a 12-month follow-up, with none lost to follow-up. Then, 10.7 months (8.6-13.0) after MGB, all patients underwent hepatobiliary scintigraphy and a reflux symptom questionnaire (GerdQ) was filled out. A gastroscopy with biopsies was done for all patients with a bile-reflux-positive scintigraphy. Mean age at operation was 56 years (41-65) and preoperative BMI 43.1 kg/m(2) (34.2-54.6). Mean %EWL was 83.9 (49.5-128.3) at 12 months. Four patients reached diabetes remission and two became insulin-independent. Hepatobiliary scintigraphy showed a transient BR into the gastric tube for five patients. Bile tracer was found in the gastric tube at 23-58 min after the tracer injection and highest activity was 8% (1-8%) at 58 min. Bile tracer was not found in the esophagus of any of the patients. One patient with a positive scintigraphy in the gastric tube required re-operation. Two patients with reflux symptoms had a negative scintigraphy. Our results indicate that transient bile reflux is common after MGB in the gastric tube, but not in the esophagus. The clinical relevance of bile reflux needs further studies.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....91b99164d7fe81e62d213e147537041f