- types:
sliding hernia, in
which the body of the
stomach moves up; and
paraesophageal hernia, in
which an
abdominal organ moves beside the esophagus. The...
-
usually performed when
medical therapy has failed; but, with a Type II (
paraesophageal)
hiatus hernia, it is the first-line procedure. The
Nissen fundoplication...
- perforations,
usually due to
medical instrumentation such as an
endoscopy or
paraesophageal surgery. The 10% of
esophageal perforations caused specifically by vomiting...
- circulation. As a
result of this anastomosis,
development of
esophageal and
paraesophageal varices is possible.
Portacaval anastomosis Right gastric vein This...
-
Esophageal cancer Eosinophilic esophagitis Hiatus hernia,
especially paraesophageal type
Dysphagia lusoria Stroke Fahr's
disease Wernicke encephalopathy...
- (October 2006). "Biologic
prosthesis reduces recurrence after laparoscopic paraesophageal hernia repair: a multicenter, prospective,
randomized trial". Ann. Surg...
-
reducing food intake, and may also
partially explain the high
incidence of
paraesophageal stomach ulcers observed in sows
during food refusal. In
humans DON is...
- al. Iron-deficiency
anemia is a
common presenting issue with
giant paraesophageal hernia and
resolves following repair.
Journal of
Gastrointestinal Surgery...
- 266–270. doi:10.1002/jso.23912. ISSN 0022-4790. Doherty, GM (2010). "
Paraesophageal Hiatal Hernia".
Quick Answers Surgery – via The McGraw-Hill Companies...
-
lymph node stations,
particularly subcarinal lymph nodes (station 7),
paraesophageal and
pulmonary ligament lymph nodes (stations 8 and 9), the aortopulmonary...