AI Article Synopsis

  • The paper discusses laparogastroscopy as a less invasive alternative to traditional gastrostomy for patients with unresectable esophageal cancer, focusing on improving oral nutrition.
  • A study involving 63 patients from a Romanian hospital shows positive results, including minimal post-operative dysphagia and an average hospital stay of just over 9 days.
  • The technique demonstrates a good safety profile with manageable complications, suggesting it could enhance both quality of life and nutrition for patients unable to undergo more invasive procedures.

Article Abstract

This paper presents the laparogastroscopy procedure, a mini-invasive, palliative method as an alternative to gastrostomy to be recommended by gastroenterologists. Laparogastroscopic stenting with endoluminal transtumoral drilling solves the problem of oral nutrition in patients with unresectable esophageal cancer, avoiding percutaneous feeding. The results of this technique are presented in a retrospective analysis of a study group of 63 patients with advanced esophageal carcinoma admitted between January 2015 and December 2020 at Department of General Surgery of Emergency County Hospital Sibiu, Romania, in terms of post-operative morbidity and mortality. The type of stents used were Pezzer prostheses (48.6%), silicone prostheses (31.9%), and self-expanding metal stents (6.9%). Eight patients (12.7%) had fistulas (at admission to the clinic), which were successfully sealed. Post-operative dysphagia was absent in most patients and minimal in 16.6% of patients, so all patients could initiate oral feeding, improving their nutritional status. The average length of hospitalization for all patients was 9.22 ± 5.05 days. The most frequent local complications were restenosis (9.5%), stent displacement (7.9%), and bleeding (4.8%). The mean survival time was 10.75 ± 15.72 months. Laparogastroscopic stenting could be a valuable alternative in palliative esophageal cancer surgery, improving the quality of life and nutritional status in patients unsuitable for endoscopic stenting.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10048741PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/healthcare11060815DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • The paper discusses laparogastroscopy as a less invasive alternative to traditional gastrostomy for patients with unresectable esophageal cancer, focusing on improving oral nutrition.
  • A study involving 63 patients from a Romanian hospital shows positive results, including minimal post-operative dysphagia and an average hospital stay of just over 9 days.
  • The technique demonstrates a good safety profile with manageable complications, suggesting it could enhance both quality of life and nutrition for patients unable to undergo more invasive procedures.
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Background: Approximately 80% of acquired eso-tracheal or mediastinal fistulae are of malignant nature. The occurrence of an eso-respiratory malignant fistula is a devastating complication for both patient and doctor, and, if not treated, records a survival time of 1 to 6 weeks.

Matherial And Method: We present a patient, aged 51, smoker,with progressive dysphagia, at first to solids, then to semi-solids and liquids, followed by manifestation of post-deglutition cough due to eso-tracheal fistula, incapability of feeding, and decline of the general condition.

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Introduction: The diagnosis of esophago gastric junction adenocarcinoma often occurs when the neoplastic process is surprised in advanced stages and blocks the esophageal-gastric junction causing dysphagia, stages in which curative therapy is more likely impossible to be accomplished. In these cases, the treatment goal is mainly to provide feeding capacity as naturally as possible and to start the adjuvant oncological treatment. The use of endoscopic esophageal prostheses provides the patient with the possibility to be fed orally and with a good social integration, but due to the technical incapacity to cross the tumoral stenosis with the endoscope, or due to the endoscopist s concerns regarding the sensitive areas (poles of the esophagus), there are reluctances in respect to this method (on average 20%).

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