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Surgical resection of a portion of esophagus and replacement by a conduit formed by another portion of alimentary tube
Many surgical options for surgical excision of esophagus
Transthoracic esophagectomy: Usually performed through right intercostal approach (Ivor Lewis procedure)
Other options include minimally invasive (laparoscopic) procedures
Stomach is ideal conduit, as it has reliable blood supply and can reach high into thorax or neck for anastomosis
Perioperative complications
Hemorrhage
Injury to recurrent laryngeal or vagus nerve (5-10%)
Injury to tracheobronchial tree
Chylothorax (2-4%)
Postoperative complications
Essentially all patients have some degree of dysphagia, early satiety, and reflux following esophagectomy
Anastomotic leak (10-16%)
Anastomotic stricture (15-25%)
Diaphragmatic hernia (1-6%)
Delayed emptying of conduit
Causes: Redundant or twisted conduit, mechanical obstruction, functional delay
Recurrent carcinoma
Complication rates vary substantially according to experience and skill of surgical team
Open surgical procedures: Higher perioperative morbidity and mortality
High (cervical) anastomoses: Higher incidence of injury to laryngeal nerve
Imaging Protocols
Esophagram: 1st postoperative study is done with water-soluble nonionic contrast agent (e.g., Omnipaque)
CECT: Complementary to esophagram for strictures, leaks, abscesses, etc.
PET/CT: Best for detection of recurrent carcinoma
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