AI Article Synopsis

  • Abdominal pain is the most common issue leading to hospital admissions after Roux-en-Y gastric bypass (RYGB), with internal hernias being a significant but hard-to-diagnose cause of this pain.
  • A study analyzed 13 patients who underwent internal hernia repair and compared them to 49 non-complicated RYGB patients, focusing on the incidence and characteristics of their abdominal pain.
  • Findings indicated that a majority of patients (77%) with internal hernias experienced similar pain traits to those without complications, suggesting that certain pain patterns could indicate internal hernias, but treatment approaches remain debated, with laparoscopic exploration being a potential option.

Article Abstract

Background: Abdominal pain is the most frequent cause of hospital admission after Roux-en-y gastric bypass (RYGB). Among numerous possible underlying causes, internal hernias represent one of the most peculiar and insidious conditions, setting challenging diagnostic and therapeutic problems for the surgeon. The aim of this study is to analyze aspecific abdominal pain incidence and characteristics after RYGB, discriminating peculiar aspects suggestive of internal hernias.

Methods: 13 patients submitted to internal hernia repair after laparoscopic antecolic RYGB and a group of 49 controls (non-complicated RYGB) have been assessed using a specific questionnaire. Overall aspecific abdominal pain incidence and characteristics have been analysed. Typical pain traits and predisposing conditions for internal hernias have been investigated.

Results: 33% of controls reported aspecific abdominal pain after RYGB, mainly early postprandial, deep, remittent, colicky, located in the upper left abdomen. 77% of the case patients reported prodromal episodes of pain similar to the controls. The only significant differences between prodromal and acute episodes were pain intensity and quality (continuous). Excess weight lost at 3 months significantly correlated with internal hernia occurrence (p: 0.002).

Conclusions: Based on abdominal pain characteristics, we can reasonably postulate the presence of remittent bowel torsions (remittent internal hernia) in many patients after antecolic RYGB, only occasionally complicating. Therapeutic management of these cases remains controversial, being laparoscopic exploration a reasonable option when symptomatology is suggestive.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6776200PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.23750/abm.v90i2.7145DOI Listing

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