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The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, Vol 82, 547-558, Copyright © 1981 by The American Association for Thoracic Surgery and The Western Thoracic Surgical Association
TR DeMeester, E Lafontaine, BE Joelsson, DB Skinner, JW Ryan, GC O'Sullivan, BS Brunsden and LF Johnson
One hundred two patients referred to our Esophageal Function Laboratory
without endoscopic evidence of esophagitis were divided into two groups on
the basis of the presence of a hiatal hernia on endoscopic examination.
Fifty-three patients had a hiatal hernia and 49 did not. Both groups and 30
normal volunteer subjects had esophageal manometry and 24 hour esophageal
pH monitoring. The incompetency of the cardia in patients with a hiatal
hernia was dependent upon loss of components responsible for the antireflux
mechanism, mainly a decrease in distal esophageal sphincter pressure and a
decrease in the length of the sphincter exposed to the positive-pressure
environment of the abdomen. These deficiencies were not related to the
presence of a hiatal hernia and were similar to those of patients with an
incompetent cardia without a hiatal hernia. Patients with a hiatal hernia
and an incompetent cardia had significantly more esophageal exposure to
refluxed acid than without a hiatal hernia. On the basis of the number of
reflux episodes that lasted 5 minutes or longer and radioisotope transit
studies, this increased acid exposure was due to both a loss of competency
of the cardia and poor esophageal clearance secondary to the presence of a
hiatal hernia. Reduction of the hernia and anchoring the distal esophagus
into the abdomen not only may improve the antireflux mechanism, but
corrects the clearance abnormality as well. The presence of a hiatal hernia
has a detrimental effect on the clearance function of the body of the
esophagus and may aggravate the effects of gastroesophageal reflux due to
an incompetent cardia.
ARTICLES
Relationship of a hiatal hernia to the function of the body of the esophagus and the gastroesophageal junction
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