Diffuse esophageal spasm surgery: Difference between revisions
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*Surgical intervention is not recommended for the management of DES. Surgery is usually reserved for patients with manometrically proven, symptomatic and those cases no responding to medical therapy. | *Surgical intervention is not recommended for the management of DES. Surgery is usually reserved for patients with manometrically proven, symptomatic and those cases no responding to medical therapy. | ||
==Surgery== | |||
*POEM (per-oral endoscopic myotomy) and ballon dilatation are the commonly followed surgical technique | *POEM (per-oral endoscopic myotomy) and ballon dilatation are the commonly followed surgical technique | ||
*cumulative clinical success of POEM in all SEDs was 87% | *The cumulative clinical success of POEM in all SEDs(spastic esophageal disorders) was 87% based on eight observational studies involving 179 patients. | ||
==References== | ==References== |
Revision as of 18:24, 9 November 2017
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Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]; Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief:
Overview
The mainstay of treatment for DES is medical therapy. Surgery is usually reserved for patients with manometrically proven, symptomatic and those cases no responding to medical therapy
Indications
- Surgical intervention is not recommended for the management of DES. Surgery is usually reserved for patients with manometrically proven, symptomatic and those cases no responding to medical therapy.
Surgery
- POEM (per-oral endoscopic myotomy) and ballon dilatation are the commonly followed surgical technique
- The cumulative clinical success of POEM in all SEDs(spastic esophageal disorders) was 87% based on eight observational studies involving 179 patients.