Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
En bloc esophageal mucosectomy for concentric circumferential mucosal resection (with video).
- Journal:
- Gastrointestinal endoscopy
- Year:
- 2009
- Authors:
- Willingham, Field F et al.
- Affiliation:
- Massachusetts General Hospital · United States
Abstract
BACKGROUND: With conventional EMR, specimens are fragmented, metaplasia may be left behind, and invasive lesions could be missed because of incomplete sampling. Concentric subtotal esophageal mucosectomy would address these limitations. OBJECTIVE: To examine en bloc esophageal mucosectomy (EEM). DESIGN: A prospective case series. SETTING: An academic hospital. SUBJECTS: Nine swine. INTERVENTIONS: Conventional EMR was performed in the proximal esophagus. The submucosal space was entered, and the distal two thirds of the esophageal mucosa was freed with blunt dissection. A snare was threaded over the column of mucosa to the gastroesophageal junction. The column was resected, and the mucosa was retrieved. MAIN OUTCOME AND MEASUREMENTS: Clinical examination, follow-up endoscopy, necropsy, and gross and histopathologic examination. RESULTS: EEM permitted subtotal esophageal mucosectomy in 9 of 9 swine (tissue specimens removed ranged 9-15 cm in length). The mean procedure duration was 110 minutes. In the survival series, 4 of 4 swine thrived after surgery, for 9 to 13 days. At 9 days, there was no evidence of a perforation, stricture, or leak. At 13 days, 2 swine had a mild proximal stricture, which was easily traversed with a 9.8-mm gastroscope. On necropsy, the mediastinal and thoracic cavities were unremarkable in 3 of 4 swine. One swine was found to have a contained abscess containing cellulose, presumably secondary to ingestion of wood-chip bedding material postoperatively. Reepithelialization was present on histologic examination. LIMITATIONS: An animal study. CONCLUSIONS: EEM is feasible and enabled concentric subtotal esophageal mucosal resection. The technique could completely and circumferentially excise intramucosal lesions. Longer follow-up and larger studies are needed to evaluate infection, stricture, and safety.
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Search related cases →Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/19111695/