1 / 47

Oesophageal Surgery

Oesophageal Surgery. Mike Poullis. What Is It?. Surgery on the oesophagus Cancer of the oesophagus Ruptured Boerhaaves Syndrome Reflux disease Strictures Achalasia. Anatomy. Normal Oesophagus. Cancer of the Oesophagus. Type and Location of Tumours of Oesophagus. Type Adenocarcinoma

Anita
Télécharger la présentation

Oesophageal Surgery

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Oesophageal Surgery Mike Poullis

  2. What Is It? • Surgery on the oesophagus • Cancer of the oesophagus • Ruptured Boerhaaves Syndrome • Reflux disease • Strictures • Achalasia

  3. Anatomy

  4. Normal Oesophagus

  5. Cancer of the Oesophagus

  6. Type and Location of Tumours of Oesophagus • Type • Adenocarcinoma • Squamous • Location • Lower third Adenocarcinoma • Middle third • Upper third Squamous

  7. Investigating Oesphageal Cancer Patients • History • Examination • Special investigations • CXR • ECG • PFTs • CT • Oesophgoscopy • Endooesphageal ultrasound • Barium • Manometry • 24hr pH

  8. CXR

  9. ECG

  10. PFTs • FVC and FEV1 • Major risk of surgery is respiratory complications

  11. Zones of the oesophagus

  12. CT Lower Third

  13. CT Middle Third

  14. Oesophgoscopy

  15. Oesophgoscopy

  16. Endo-oesphageal ultrasound

  17. Barium

  18. Manometry

  19. 24hr pH

  20. Unresectable oesophageal cancer

  21. What are the operations? • Left thoracophrenotomy • Ivor Lewis • McKeown • Orringer Transhiatal esophagectomy (THE) • Transabdominal • En Bloc resection • Endothoracic endooesophageal pull through • Total gastrectomy and Roux-en-Y reconstruction • Thorascopic eosphagectomy

  22. What are the operations at CTC? • Left thoracophrenotomy +/- neck anastomosis • Ivor Lewis • McKeown

  23. Left thoracophrenotomy +/- neck anastomosis • Tumour location • Lower third • Incision • Resect tumour • Mobilise • Re anastomose ? Neck ? thorax

  24. Ivor Lewis • Tumour location • Middle third • Incision • Abdominal • Thoracic • Resect tumour • Mobilise • Re anastomose ? Neck ? thorax

  25. Ivor Lewis

  26. Incision

  27. McKeown • Ivor Lewis with a neck anastomosis

  28. Staging • T descriptor • Tis. Carcinoma in situ. • TI. Tumour does not extend into the muscularis propria. • T2. Tumour invades muscularis propria. • T3. Tumour extends beyond the muscularis propria • T4. Tumour invades adjacent structures. • Ndescriptor • NO. No regional lymph-node metastasis. • NI. Regional lymph-node metastasis. • Regional lymph nodes are difficult to define lower thoracic lymph node metastases from a cervical oesophageal tumour are considered distant (M) disease, as are coeliac lymph node metastases from a lower-third oesophageal carcinoma. • M descriptor • No distant metastases. • Distant metastases. • For tumours of lower thoracic oesophagus: • Mla. Metastasis in coeliac lymph nodes. M lb. Other distant metastasis. • For tumours of mid-thoracic oesophagus: • Mia. Not applicable. Mib. Nonregional lymph node or other distant metastasis. • For tumours of upper thoracic oesophagus: • Mia. Metastasis in cervical lymph nodes. Ml b. Other distant metastasis.

  29. Outcome T1a Tumor invades lamina propria T1b Tumor invades submucosa Lymph node 5-year metastasissurvival rate T1a 0% 100% T1b 47% 86% without nodal metastasis 43% with nodal metastasis

  30. Outcome • N1 Regional lymph node metastasis • N1a 1-3 nodes involved • N1b 4-7 nodes involved • N1c >7 nodes involved 2-year 5-year Median survival survival survival rate rate (months) N1a 22% 11% 12 N1b 18% 0% 9 N1c 0% 0% 6

  31. Post Operative Complications • Early complications ( days 0 to 5) include • Poor urine output and low blood pressure • Bleeding • Respiratory complications • Medical comorbidity • Intermediate complications ( days 3 to 10) include • The septic patient • DVT and PE • Medical comorbidity • Late complications ( days 5 to 10) include • Anastomotic leaks and new onset atrial fibrillation • Aspiration • Chyle leaks • The septic patient • DVT and PE • Medical comorbidity

  32. Post Operative Leaks • Always think leak to explain anything!

  33. Ruptured Oesophagus Boerhaaves Syndrome

  34. Reflux disease

  35. Strictures

  36. Achalasia

  37. Thankyou

  38. Next week23rd NovemberThoracic Surgery ComplicationsLecture Theatre

More Related