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Should patients with esophageal atresia be submitted to esophageal substitution before they start walking?

Abstract
Esophagocoloplasty and gastric transposition are two major methods for esophageal substitution in children with esophageal atresia, and there is broad agreement that these operations should not be performed before the children start walking. However, there are some reported advantages of performing such operations in the first months of life or in the neonatal period. In this study, we compared our experience with esophageal substitution procedures performed in walking children with esophageal atresia, with the outcomes of children who had the operation before the third month of life reported in the literature. The purpose of this study was to establish if we have to wait until the children start walking before indicating the esophageal replacement procedure. From February 1978 to October 2009, 129 children with esophageal atresia underwent esophageal replacement in our hospital (99 colonic interpositions and 30 gastric transpositions). The records of these patients were reviewed for data regarding demographics, complications (leaks, graft failures, strictures, and graft torsion), and mortality and compared with those reported in the two main articles on esophageal replacement in the neonatal period or in patients less than 3 months of age. The main complication of our casuistic was cervical anastomosis leakage, which sealed spontaneously in all except in four patients. One patient of the esophagocoloplasty group developed graft necrosis and three patients in the gastric transposition group had gastric outlet obstruction, secondary to axial torsion of the stomach placed in the retrosternal space. The long-term outcome of the patients in both groups was considered good to excellent in terms of normal weight gain, absence of dysphagia, and other gastrointestinal symptoms. The comparisons of the main complications and mortality rates in walking children with esophageal substitutions performed in the first months of life showed that the incidences of cervical anastomotic leaks and graft failures were similar, but mortality rate in the first few months of life was significantly greater than that observed in our group of patients (P= 0.001). Based on the comparison of our results with those of published series, we conclude that the recommendation of performing esophagocoloplasty or total gastric transposition in children with esophageal atresia after they start walking is still valid.
AuthorsU Tannuri, A C A Tannuri
JournalDiseases of the esophagus : official journal of the International Society for Diseases of the Esophagus (Dis Esophagus) Vol. 24 Issue 1 Pg. 25-9 (Jan 2011) ISSN: 1442-2050 [Electronic] United States
PMID20545969 (Publication Type: Journal Article)
Copyright© 2010 Copyright the Authors. Journal compilation © 2010, Wiley Periodicals, Inc. and the International Society for Diseases of the Esophagus.
Topics
  • Age Factors
  • Anastomosis, Surgical
  • Anastomotic Leak (blood, etiology)
  • Chi-Square Distribution
  • Colon (transplantation)
  • Esophageal Atresia (surgery)
  • Esophageal Stenosis (etiology)
  • Esophagoplasty (adverse effects, methods, mortality)
  • Esophagus (surgery)
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Infant
  • Infant, Newborn
  • Male
  • Reoperation
  • Retrospective Studies
  • Stomach (surgery)
  • Torsion Abnormality (etiology)
  • Transplantation, Heterotopic (methods)
  • Walking

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