J Korean Surg Soc.
2000 Jul;59(1):46-53.
Gastric-Emptying Patterns after Gastroduodenal Reconstruction Preservation of the truncal vagus nerve
- Affiliations
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- 1Department of Surgery, College of Medicine, Chungbuk National University, Cheongju, Korea.
Abstract
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PURPOSE: Gastric emptying after a gastric resection has been studied in early gastric cancer. Most
reports are retrospective and show that gastric emptying after gastroduodenal reconstruction is faster than
normal. This study was designed to evaluate the gastric-emptying pattern after a gastroduodenal
reconstruction with preservation of the truncal vagus nerve had been performed on a patient whose
preoperative gastric-emptying time had been normal. METHODS: From July 1996 to February 1998, we
performed a distal gastrectomy with gastroduodenal reconstruction with preservation of the truncal vagus
nerve in 11 patients (9 patients with early gastric cancer, 1 patient with advanced gastric cancer, and
1 patient with high-grade dysplasia) whose preoperative gastric-emptying times was normal. To evaluate
the gastric emptying after the gastrectomy and gastroduodenal reconstruction, we analyzed the lag time
(when 10% of food is delivered to the duodenum), T1/2 (when 50% of food is delivered to the duodenum),
and the residual food in the stomach after 100 minutes (%) by means of radionuclide scintigraphy using
a single-head gamma camera after ingestion of an 99mTc-tin-colloid steamed egg. We defined the delayed
gastric emptying as T1/2 longer than the mean of the preoperative value by 2 standard deviation. RESULTS:
Among the 11 patients with gastroduodenal reconstruction, gastric emptying was normal in 4 patients
and delayed in 7 patients; only one of the delayed cases has GI symptoms such as early satiety. There
were no rapid gastric emptying cases. CONCLUSION: Rapid gastric emptying after gastroduodenal recon
struction with preservation of the truncal vagus nerve was rare.