Acid Reflux: Surgical Treatments

by Frank Robson

When other treatment options do not work, acid reflux can often be treated by means of surgery.

Typically, this happens when drug therapy fails, or the patient has severe bleeding and other physical discomforts, that indicate an invasive surgical intervention.

The standard surgical procedure that is done for Acid Reflux sufferers is called the Nissen fundoplication.

Traditional Nissen fundoplication, developed in the 1950s, was a longish procedure, a serious surgery that required a hospital stay of a week or more. There would be a telltale. 10-inch scar, and for the next month or more one took it cushy and battled on through recovery and some pain.

In the primeval days of this surgery, patients often developed worsening symptoms of acid reflux and had difficulty swallowing.

In the last 25 years or so, laparoscopic surgery has advanced by leaps and bounds, Problems visaged with the traditional operation. Have been ironed out. The overall availability of excellent pathological diagnostic tests has also contributed in a meaningful way, to a better selection of patients for surgery.

The entire surgical procedure appears to be similar to what we would do to hold down the contents of a room when visaged with a high-speed flood or typhoon.

The Lower Esophageal Sphincter is like a door between the esophagus and the stomach. It is this sphincter muscle that is prefabricated stronger by surgery. Surrounding the sphincter with permanently attached stomach tissue provides the necessary support that the muscle needs to function properly.

The following step is to return the part of the stomach extending out from underneath the diaphragm, called the hiatal hernia, back to its rightful location. Abdominal pressure is successfully reduced because of correcting any hiatal hernia and supporting the muscles of the esophageal sphincter. The entire procedure protects the body from gastric juice backflows that are usually brought on because of certain combinations of food.

During such surgeries, sometimes, the scarring and lesion of the Esophageal passage is also treated, Turns out that such surgery gives successful outcomes 95% of the time, to the extent that no medications are later required to be taken, regular by the patient to relieve the now non-existent Acid Reflux!

About the Author:


This entry was posted on Thursday, July 3rd, 2008 and is filed under Health. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

Leave a Reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.

Sponsors

Recent Posts

Categories

Calendar

July 2008
M T W T F S S
« Jun   Aug »
 123456
78910111213
14151617181920
21222324252627
28293031  

Archives