Title: Complication following esophagectomy
1Complication following esophagectomy
2Esophagectomy
- Method
- Transthoracic approach
- Transhiatal approach
- Tri-incisional approach
- Left thoracoabdominal approach
- Conduit
- Stomach
- Colon
- Jejunum
- Anastomosis site
- Thorax
- Neck
- Anastomosis technique
- Hand-sewn
- Stapling device
Seminars in Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery,
Vol 16, No 2 (Summer), 2004 pp 124-132
3Complications
- Anastomotic leak
- Conduit necrosis
- Anastomic stricture
- Hemorrhage
- Chylothorax
- Pleural effusion
- Injury to the recurrent lanryngeal nerve
- Tracheobhronchial injury
- Cardiovascular and pulmonary complications
Seminars in Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery,
Vol 15, No 2 (April), 2003 pp 210-215
4Anastomotic leak
- Incedence 23/307 (7.5 )
- Mortality rate 8/23 (35 )
- Death predictor
- Age (died, 72.88.3 years survived, 65.38.8
yearsp0.063) - Location of anastomosis (cervical, 3/9 died
thoracic, 5/14 died p0.91) - Leak presentation (clinical, 6/12 died contrast
study, 2/11 died p0.11) - Time of leak (lt7 days, 3/5 died 7 days, 5/18
died p0.18) - Presence of gastric necrosis (necrosis, 3/3 died
no necrosis, 5/20 diedp0.019) - Treatment (surgical, 4/4 died conservative, 4/19
died p0.005)
Ann Thorac Cardiovasc Surg Vol. 10, No. 2 (2004)
5Anastomotic leak
- Incedence 19/291 (6.5 )
- Hospital mortality rate 6/19 (31.6 )
British Journal of Surgery 2001, 88, 1346-1351
6Anastomotic leak
British Journal of Surgery 2001, 88, 1346-1351
7Anastomotic leak
- Definition of Surgical Infection Study Group
Seminars in Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery,
Vol 16, No 2 (Summer), 2004 pp 124-132
8Anastomotic leak
- Esophageal (intrinsic) factor
- Absence of an outer serosal layer
- Longitudinal orientation of the exposed
esophageal musculature - Patient-related factor
- Severe malnutrition
- Not age, DM, perioprative steroid use
- Surgical/Techenical factor
- Tension
- Vessel supply
- Mucosal incorporation/apposition
Seminars in Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery,
Vol 16, No 2 (Summer), 2004 pp 124-132
9Anastomotic leak
- Diagnosis
- PE
- Chest pain, dyspnea, saliva exuding, bile
exiting, fever - Lab
- CBC, CRP, Pleural effusion in CXR, contrast
swallowing
Seminars in Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery,
Vol 16, No 2 (Summer), 2004 pp 124-132
10Anastomotic leak
Dig Surg 2002199298
11Anastomotic leak
British Journal of Surgery 2001, 88, 1346-1351
12Conduit necrosis
- Occurs in approximately 1 of cases
- Etiologic factors
- Similar to those indicated for leaks
- Also conduit torsion, intrinsic vascular
insufficiency due to atherosclerosis of the
feeding vessel, technical mishaps - S/S
- Initially subtle, progress rapidly
- Operative intervention is always necessary
- Refashioned, complete take-down with debridement
of necrotic tissue, wide-drainage, proximal
diversion, replacement of the remaining viable
stomach within the abdomen.
Seminars in Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery,
Vol 16, No 2 (Summer), 2004 pp 124-132
13Anastomotic stricture
- Incidence varies from 1 to 50
- Often occurs months after the procedure
- Often associated with prior occurrence of a leak
- S/S Complaint of dysphagia
- Should be carefully evaluated for recurrent
disease with endoscopy, with or without
endoscopic ultrasound (EUS), abdominal and chest
CT - Benign stricture can be treated on a symptomatic
basis by dilation or stenting - Proton-pump inhibitor
Seminars in Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery,
Vol 15, No 2 (April), 2003 pp 210-215 Seminars
in Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, Vol 16,
No 2 (Summer), 2004 pp 124-132
14Hemorrhage
- Incidence of 3 to 5
- Requires urgent re-exploration
- In most circumstances prevented with proper
surgical technique - Diagnosis usually delayed by 12 to 24 hrs
- Volume replacement
- Fairly sizable fields of dissection
- Unexpected tachycardia and decreased urine output
are usually early clues to bleeding - Resuscitated with blood products to correct any
coagulopathies and then reexplored
Seminars in Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery,
Vol 15, No 2 (April), 2003 pp 210-215
15Chylothorax
- Incidence of 1 to 5
- Diagnosed by the presence of pleural effusion,
consisting of a milky fluid with a high
triglyceride and lymphocyte count - Should be suspected when the chest tube output is
high after postoperative day 4 - Mamagement
- Half conservatively by restricting the oral
intake and on intravenous hyperalimentation - Embolization of the thoracic duct using
interventional radiology techniques - Surgical exploration
- Perioperative prophylactic thoracic duct ligation
- Repair a thoracic duct leak during the course of
esophagectomy
Seminars in Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery,
Vol 15, No 2 (April), 2003 pp 210-215
16Pleural effusion, pneumothorax
- Result from an injury to the pleura on the
contralateral hemithorax - Should rule out hemorrhage, chylothorax, conduit
leak, metastatic disease, airway injury - Managed by observation, percutaneous drainage or
thoracostomy drainage
Seminars in Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery,
Vol 15, No 2 (April), 2003 pp 210-215
17Injury to the recurrent laryngeal nerve
- An incidence of 10 to 20 in cervical
anastomoses - Diagnosis
- Video-assisted swallow studies
- Fiberoptic evaluation
- Perioperative intubation caused vocal cord edema
can mask the injury for a few days
Seminars in Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery,
Vol 15, No 2 (April), 2003 pp 210-215
18Tracheobronchial injury
- Neoesophageal-to-bronchial fistulas
- S/S Recurrent pneumonia or empyema
- Small injuries often heal without treatment or
adverse sequelae - Can lead to fistula formation involving the
neoesophagus, requiring stenting or operative
repair
Seminars in Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery,
Vol 15, No 2 (April), 2003 pp 210-215
19Cardiovascular and pulmonary complications
- Esophageal ca patient
- Ederly, malnourished, smoking, alcohol abuse
- Cardiovascular complications 5 to 10
- Most common atrial fibrillation
- Management
- Intraoperative and postoperative Swan-Ganz for
high-risk patients - Preoperative and postoperative use of
beta-blockade or calcium channel blockers - Pulmonary complications 20 to 30
- Pneumonia, aspiration, respiratory failure
- Two principal reasons malnourished, smoking
- Early tracheostomy is favored in patients with
prolonged ventilation requirements
Seminars in Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery,
Vol 15, No 2 (April), 2003 pp 210-215
20Conclussion
- Careful preoperative evaluation of the patient
- Meticulous surgical technique
- An awareness of the potential complications
- Mortality rate of 2.5 at a high-volume center,
in contrast to a nearly 10 mortality rate at a
low-volume center
Seminars in Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery,
Vol 15, No 2 (April), 2003 pp 210-215
21(No Transcript)
22Povidone-iodine
- Water-soluble complex of iodine with
polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP) - Works through disruption of pathogen cell walls
- Bactericidal ability against a large array of
pathogens
23Method
- Search of MEDLINE (19662006) and EMBASE
(19802006) - Focused on the efficacy or risks, or both, of
povidone-iodine irrigation to prevent surgical
site infection - Either a randomized controlled trial (RCT) or a
comparative study - Exclusion
- Treatment of surgical site infection
- Used povidone-iodine topically
24Result
- 15 studies met all the inclusion criteria
- Years of publication 1977 to 2006
- General (8),cardiovascular (2), orthopedic (2),
urologic (1) - RCTs (11), single-blind (3)
- Level I (3), level II (12)
25Discussion
- 5/15 not find povidone-iodine superior to saline,
water or no irrigation - Surgery in general (1), general (3),
cardiovascular (1) - Effectiveness even at low concentrations,
concentrations less than 5 would seem
appropriate - Whether povidone-iodine solution would show
efficacy in conjunction with antibiotics is
unknown - Several recent RCTs demonstrated povidone-iodine
irrigation further reduced surgical site
infection rates - The appropriateness of using povidone-iodine
irrigation in children is unknown - Risk
- Increased postoperative serum iodine
- Should not be used in patients with iodine
sensitivity, burns, thryroid disease or renal
disease - The evidence suggests that povidone-iodine
irrigation may be effective in preventing
surgical site infection
26- Thank you for your attention !