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  • The Internet Journal of Surgery
  • Volume 3
  • Number 2

Original Article

Quick Review: The Benign Gastric Ulcer

B Phillips, C Perry

Citation

B Phillips, C Perry. Quick Review: The Benign Gastric Ulcer. The Internet Journal of Surgery. 2001 Volume 3 Number 2.

Abstract

Peptic ulcer disease historically presented as a surgical disease; however, with the advent of medical regimens targeted at acid production (e.g. H2-blockers, proton-pump inhibitors, etc), it has become a relatively infrequent surgical problem. When it does present, GU is most common in males & the elderly (peak age: 55 - 65). 90,000 new gastric ulcers are diagnosed annually and 3,000 patients die/yr. as a direct result or complication of gastric ulcer disease. 10% of all gastric ulcers - occur over an underlying Malignancy.

 

In General

Peptic ulcer disease historically presented as a surgical disease; however, with the advent of medical regimens targeted at acid production (e.g. H2-blockers, proton-pump inhibitors, etc), it has become a relatively infrequent surgical problem.

  • Most Common in Males & the Elderly

  • Peak Age: 55 – 65

  • 90,000 new gastric ulcers are diagnosed annually

  • 3,000 patients die/yr. as a direct result or complication of gastric ulcer disease

  • 10% of all gastric ulcers - occur over an underlying malignancy

  • Type I: Ulcer along the lesser curve

  • Type II: 2 ulcers present - one gastric, one duodenal

  • Type III: Prepyloric ulcer

  • Type IV: Proximal gastroesophageal ulcer

Etiology

High-Acid Production, Types II & III

Defect in the Mucosal Defense, Types I & IV

  • epithelial turnover

  • hydrophobic surface

  • mucus & HCO3- production

  • endogenous prostanoids

  • trophic peptides

  • gastric motility

Concomitant hemorrhage & perforation is usually due to 2 Ulcers:

  • An anterior perforated ulcer (stomach or duodenum)

  • A posterior, bleeding one (duodenum)

Both should be identified at the time of the original operation, and will be best treated by a definitive procedure

5 % of patients who undergo operation for perforation bleed post-operatively due to a synchronous, posterior lesion

Non-operative Treatment of the perforated ulcer:

  • Continuous NG Suction

  • High-dose Antibiotics

  • H2-Antagonists

    • May be effective in poor-surgical candidates

    • High incidence of Renal Failure & Abscess Formation

85 - 90% of patients are colonized with H. pylori!

Treatment

Antibiotics, Anti-secretory Agents, +/- Mucosal Defense Agent

  • e.g. 3 weeks, Bismuth Compound, Tetracyclin, Flagyl

  • 12 weeks, H2 Antagonist

Indications for Elective Surgery

  • Failure of Medical Tx (12 weeks x 2)

  • Recurrence after initial success

  • Inability to exclude malignancy

Indications for Emergent Surgery

  • Hemorrhage

  • Perforation

Goals of Surgery

  • Correct the emergent problem

  • Prevent recurrence, if possible

  • Exclude malignancy

Surgical Options

1.Vagotomy -

  • Truncal

  • Selective

  • Parietal-Cell (highly-selective)

2. Pyloroplasty -

  • Heineke-Mikulicz

  • Finney

  • Jaboulay

3. Antrectomy -

  • Billroth I (gastroduodenostomy)

  • Billroth II (gastrojejunostomy)

  • Roux-en-Y Gastrojejunostomy

Cameron's Text: the definitive ulcer operation should include a distal gastrectomy (with excision of the ulcer, if possible) and a Billroth I reconstruction

However

1. Pt's - requiring Blood Transfusions (“Stable”):
V & A

2. Pt's with life-threatening Sepsis/Hemorrhage:
Biopsy (6)
Excision or Oversew

3. Pt's with an Unstable-Type IV:
Ligation of the Left Gastric Artery
High Anterior Gastrotomy
Biopsy/Excision & Oversew

Complications of Ulcer Surgery

Early: Duodenal Stump Leak

  • Gastric Retention

  • Anastamotic Breakdown

  • Hemorrhage

Late: Recurrent Ulcer
[10% following V & P]
[2 - 3% following V & A]

Gastrocolic/Gastrojejunal Fistula

Dumping Syndrome - [1 - 2% of patients]

Alkaline Gastritis

Anemia [30% of patients, five years post-op]

Postvagotomy Diarrhea [5 - 10% of patients]

Chronic Gastroparesis

* may require a Roux-en-Y Esophagojejunostomy

References

Author Information

Bradley J. Phillips, M.D.
Dept. of Trauma & Critical Care, Boston University School of Medicine, Boston Medical Center

Charles W. Perry, M.D.
Department of Surgery, University of Arizona

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