Gastric volvulus
Appearance
The stomach or part of the stomach is rotated at least 180 degrees along its longitudinal or transverse axis
Classification
[edit | edit source]- Anatomical (not clinically as important)
- Organoaxial (35%)
- Stomach rotates around its longitudinal axis (a transverse line between the pylorus and GOJ)
- In most cases the antrum rotates anteriorly and superiorly and the fundus posteriorly and inferiorly, and the greater curvature comes to lie superior to the lesser curvature
- Mesenteroaxial (65%)
- Stomach rotates around its short axis - a longitudinal line parallel to the gastrohepatic omentum, connecting the middle of the greater and lesser curvatures
- Pylorus rotates anteriorly and superiorly (most common), but can sometimes move posteriorly from right to left
- The posterior of the stomach lies anteriorly
- Combined (2%)
- Organoaxial (35%)
- Aetiological
- Primary (30%):
- Rotation due to laxity/disruption of the gastric ligaments. Due to agenesis, elongation, or disruption (neoplasia, adhesions, skeletal deformity). More common with chronic symptoms.
- Usually mesenteroaxial
- Secondary (70%):
- Volvulus due to other anatomical abnormalities (paraoesophageal hernia (most common), congenital diaphragmatic hernia, diaphragmatic eventration, phrenic nerve paralysis)
- Mostly organoaxial
- Primary (30%):
- Onset
- Acute
- Chronic
Pathophysiology
[edit | edit source]- Stomach rotation >180 degrees causes complete gastric outlet obstruction, and partial is less likely with smaller rotations
- Strangulation is much more common with organoaxial than mestenteroaxial, and can occur with torsion >180 degrees
Risk factors
[edit | edit source]- Age >50 years
- Diaphragmatic abnormalities
- Phrenic nerve paralysis
- Kyphoscoliosis
Presentation:
[edit | edit source]- Borchardt's Triad - sudden onset of constant and severe epigastric pain, retching with minimal vomitus, and inability to pass NGT (70% have it)
- Haematemesis can occur
- Gastric outlet obstruction
- Suspect strangulation with fever, tachycardia and leukocystosis
- Chronic/subacute symptoms are often vague and non-specific
Investigation:
[edit | edit source]- CXR - single large, spherical gas bubble in upper abdomen or chest with air-fluid level. Note that other aetiologies of GOO are less likely to have a spherical contour
- CT - dilated stomach, often abnormal position, swirl sign (oesophagus and stomach rotating around one another), look for gastric necrosis
- Gastroscopy: tortuous stomach, paraoesophageal hernia, inability to locate and pass through the pylorus, possibly evidence of gastric ischaemia
Initial management:
[edit | edit source]- NGT (if bedside NGT is not possible, can do gastroscopy-assisted and decompress the stomach at the same time)
- Can sometimes detort the stomach spontaneously
- Resuscitate
- Antibiotics
- Many would argue for routine gastroscopy, even if NGT is in
Immediate surgery if:
[edit | edit source]- Inability to decompress stomach with NGT +/- endoscopy
- Gastric ischaemia seen on endoscopy
- Gastric perforation or mediastinal contamination
- Shock/hypotension refractory
- Severe sepsis
Definitive treatment
[edit | edit source]- Goals - return stomach to anatomic position, repair associated abnormalities, and prevent recurrence (otherwise occurs in 64% of patients treated conservatively)
- In unstable patients, open approach is recommended
- OT can be done electively in patients that improve well or achieve detorsion with low risk of strangulation
- Technique
- Abdominal approach with upper midline laparotomy (can sometimes be done laparoscopically)
- Decompression, detorsion, and observation for ischaemia
- Any strangulated segments need to be resected
- Close the stomach if you can
- If patient is unstable and large gastric resection is required, drain the distal oesophagus, close the duodenal stump and place a feeding jejunostomy. Roux-en-Y jejuno-oesophagostomy will subsequently be needed.
- If unable to reduce:
- Guide NGT into place
- Consider aspirating contents of stomach via needle or gastrotomy
- Thoracotomy
- Any strangulated segments need to be resected
- If the patient is stable, fix any diaphragmatic defect and do a proper 'elective' repair
- Excise hernia sac
- Suture the crura
- If a paraoesophageal hernia was present, consider a fundoplication
- If the patient is unstable, just do a suture gastropexy to anterior abdominal wall and complete the operation
- Stable patients with high surgical risk could have PEG gastropexy (two tube gastrostomies will fix the stomach better than one) but this is uncommonly done
- This could also be done for a spontaneous volvulus