Copyright
©The Author(s) 2015.
World Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery. Sep 27, 2015; 7(9): 190-195
Published online Sep 27, 2015. doi: 10.4240/wjgs.v7.i9.190
Published online Sep 27, 2015. doi: 10.4240/wjgs.v7.i9.190
Causes | Management | ||
Benign | Intraluminal | Foreign bodies | Surgery[2] |
Bezoar | |||
Enteroliths | |||
Intussusception | |||
Intramural | Gastrojejunostomy ulceration | ||
Extrinsic | Adhesions | ||
Volvulus | |||
Internal hernia | |||
Malignant | Recurrence | Gastric remnant | Endoscopy for enteral stenting[32] |
Anastomotic sites | Transhepatic percutaneous enteral stenting or direct percutaneous tube enterostomy[29] | ||
Lymph nodes | By-pass surgery[2] | ||
Peritoneum | |||
Carcinomatosis | |||
Radiation enteritis | Excision of the former afferent loop and reconstruction[31,33] |
Causes | Management | ||
Former Billroth II | Former Roux-en-Y | ||
Benign | Enteroliths | Endoscopy and balloon dilation of anastomotic stenosis[34] or adhesiolysis, enterotomy, removal and repair of anastomotic stenosis (stricturoplasty, addition of Braun anastomosis, conversion to Roux-en-Y)[8,16] | Endoscopy and balloon dilation of anastomotic stenosis or adhesiolysis, enterotomy, removal and repair of anastomotic stenosis (stricturoplasty, revision of the Roux-en-Y reconstruction) |
Bezoar | |||
Foreign bodies | |||
Intussusception | Manual reduction or enterectomy and conversion to Roux-en-Y[4] | Manual reduction or enterectomy and revision of Roux-en-Y reconstruction | |
Anastomotic ulceration | Balloon dilation[34], stricturoplasty or conversion to Roux-en-Y | Balloon dilation, stricturoplasty or revision of the Roux-en-Y reconstruction Adhesiolysis, excision of redundant loop and revision of the jejunojejunostomy | |
Adhesions | Adhesiolysis, Braun anastomosis or excision of redundant loop and conversion to Roux-en-Y[35] | ||
Volvulus | Enterectomy and conversion to Roux-en-Y[36] | Enterectomy and revision of the Roux-en-Y reconstruction | |
Internal hernia | Reduction and repair of the defect or reduction, repair of the defect, enterectomy and conversion to Roux-en-Y[37] | Reduction and repair of the defect or reduction, repair of the defect, enterectomy and revision of the Roux-en-Y reconstruction | |
Malignant | Endoscopy for enteral stenting[32] | Double-balloon endoscopy for enteral stenting | |
Radiation enteritis | Transhepatic percutaneous enteral stenting or direct percutaneous tube enterostomy[38] | Transhepatic percutaneous enteral stenting or direct percutaneous tube enterostomy | |
Redo-surgery when other approaches fail: By-pass[2] | Redo-surgery when other approaches fail: By-pass | ||
Adhesiolysis, mobilization and excision of the afferent loop, Roux-en-Y reconstruction | Adhesiolysis, mobilization and excision of the afferent loop, revision of the Roux-en-Y reconstruction | ||
In preceded pancreaticoduodenectomy assessment of HJ and PJ patency with MRCP. Revision of the strictured HJ, revision of the strictured PJ and/or modified Puestow[31] or pancreaticojejuno-jejunostomy if primary PJ has normal patency[33] | In preceded pancreaticoduodenectomy assessment of HJ and PJ patency with MRCP. Revision of the strictured HJ, revision of the strictured PJ and/or modified Puestow or pancreaticojejuno-jejunostomy if primary PJ has normal patency |
- Citation: Blouhos K, Boulas KA, Tsalis K, Hatzigeorgiadis A. Management of afferent loop obstruction: Reoperation or endoscopic and percutaneous interventions? World Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery 2015; 7(9): 190-195
- URL: https://www.wjgnet.com/1948-9366/full/v7/i9/190.htm
- DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.4240/wjgs.v7.i9.190