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. 1981 Sep;194(3):279-89.
doi: 10.1097/00000658-198109000-00005.

Cervical esophageal dysphagia: indications for and results of cricopharyngeal myotomy

Cervical esophageal dysphagia: indications for and results of cricopharyngeal myotomy

F H Ellis Jr et al. Ann Surg. 1981 Sep.

Abstract

Twenty patients with cervical esophageal dysphagia were treated by cricopharyngeal myotomy. Of these 20 patients, ten had pharyngoesophageal diverticula, four had a hypertensive upper esophageal sphincter (UES), four had bulbar palsy, and two has miscellaneous forms of cricopharyngeal dysfunction. Preoperative esophageal manometric examination revealed mean UES pressures of 37.2 mmHg +/- 4.8 SEM in patients with diverticula-markedly lower (p = 0.01) than in normal patients (55.9 mmHg +/- 5.0 SEM). In patients with hypertensive UES the mean pressure was 166.2 mmHg +/- 13.4, significantly higher (p less than 0.001) than normal. Incoordination of the deglutitive response of the UES characterised by premature relaxation and contraction was present in all patients with diverticula and in one other patient. Another patient exhibited incomplete sphincteric relaxation (achalasia). A 4-5 cm myotomy of the cricopharyngeus muscle and adjacent esophageal muscle was performed in all patients. On the patients with diverticula two also had diverticulectomy. No patient with bulbar palsy was benefited. All other patients were relieved of dysphagia by the operation, with the exception of one patient with a diverticulum. A subsequent diverticulectomy was required in this patient. Postoperative manometric examination revealed an average decrease in UES pressure of 63% and an average decreased in length of the high pressure zone of 1.4 cm.

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