These tools will no longer be maintained as of December 31, 2024. Archived website can be found here. PubMed4Hh GitHub repository can be found here. Contact NLM Customer Service if you have questions.
Pubmed for Handhelds
PUBMED FOR HANDHELDS
Search MEDLINE/PubMed
Title: Antrectomy and gastroduodenostomy with or without vagotomy in peptic ulcer disease. A prospective study with a 5-year follow-up. Author: Rehnberg O. Journal: Acta Chir Scand Suppl; 1983; 515():1-63. PubMed ID: 6579806. Abstract: The results of a 5-year follow-up of 289 consecutive, peptic ulcer patients treated by antrectomy and gastroduodenostomy, with or without vagotomy, are presented. Patients with a preoperative gastric acid secretory capacity (PAO) below 40 mmol/h were treated by antrectomy alone, while subjects with a higher PAO had a vagotomy in addition. The antrectomy was defined by lithmus indication of the corpus-antrum border and by histologic verification, including gastrin cell counting. The over all incidence of gastroscopically verified recurrent ulceration was 8.5%. In patients with ulcer location in the bulb or the pyloric/prepyloric region (juxtapyloric ulcer) and treated by antrectomy alone, the recurrence rate was 18% (n = 102), and in gastric ulcer patients it was 4% (n = 47). Altogether 14 patients with recurrent ulcer were subsequently reoperated on by vagotomy showing no further recurrence. Antrectomy combined with vagotomy was primarily performed almost exclusively in patients with juxtapyloric ulceration, in whom the recurrence rate was 2% (n = 106). According to a postoperative insulin test, the patients with recurrence after antrectomy and vagotomy were incompletely vagotomized. In patients who remained free of symptoms or signs of recurrent disease, the median reduction in gastric acid secretory capacity was about 60% after antrectomy alone and 80% after antrectomy and vagotomy. In juxtapyloric ulcer patients with recurrence after antrectomy alone there was a small median reduction in PAO one month after operation (26%) and then an increase close to the preoperative level (6% reduction). In patients with a postoperative reduction in PAO of less than 35%, there was a high probability of recurrent ulcer, about 70%. In spite of selection of patients with a comparatively low preoperative PAO (less than 40 mmol/h) for antrectomy alone, the recurrence rate was 18% in patients with juxtapyloric ulcer location. In this selected group of patients the preoperative PAO was not higher in patients with ulcer recurrence than in patients who were asymptomatic after the operation. Selecting patients with juxtapyloric ulcer for antrectomy, with or without vagotomy, on the basis of gastric acid secretory capacity therefore seems unjustified. When vagotomy was added to antrectomy and gastroduodenostomy it seemed to increase the risk of developing serious (Visick 3u and 4) postgastrectomy syndromes; 12% after antrectomy and vagotomy versus 3% after antrectomy alone. Vagotomy appeared to be associated with an increased risk of bile reflux gastritis, gastric mycosis, and milk intolerance. Dumping and diarrhoea after vagotomy often coincided with milk intolerance. Antrectomy, with or without vagotomy, did not markedly impair recorded nutritional parameters.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]