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Journal of the American College of Surgeons ; 236(5 Supplement 3):S3, 2023.
Article in English | EMBASE | ID: covidwho-20236569

ABSTRACT

Introduction: The COVID-19 pandemic caused significant decreases in outpatient procedures, many of which are required before to antireflux operation (ARS). The purpose of this study was to add functional luminal imaging probe (FLIP) to esophagogastroduodenoscopy (EGD) and esophageal pH monitoring to assess its utility in decreasing the need for follow up studies in patients being evaluated for ARS. Method(s): Retrospective observational study was performed on 81 patients being evaluated for GERD who underwent EGD, pH monitoring, and FLIP. Data collected included average distensibility index (DI) at 60 mL, presence of repetitive anterograde or retrograde contractions, hiatal hernia dimensions, pathology results, pH data, and need for follow-up testing. Result(s): Based on FLIP results, HRM was recommended in 35 patients (43.2%). This included 14 patients with DI suggestive of significant esophagogastric junction outflow obstruction, eight of whom completed HRM with four confirmed as achalasia. FLIP results were suspicious for eosinophilic esophagitis (EoE) in four patients of which one was confirmed as EoE on biopsy. Gastric emptying study was felt to be necessary for 11 patients before to ARS. Conclusion(s): FLIP identified patients with possible alternative pathologies including achalasia and EoE that would otherwise be a contraindication to ARS. FLIP at the time of EGD and pH monitoring is useful as it guides the clinical decision on need for additional outpatient procedures, which may be difficult to obtain in pandemic conditions. FLIP was effective at reducing the requirements for further follow-up testing in the majority of patients being evaluated for potential ARS.

2.
American Journal of Gastroenterology ; 117(10 Supplement 2):S1643-S1644, 2022.
Article in English | EMBASE | ID: covidwho-2323840

ABSTRACT

Introduction: In a subset of Covid19-convalescent patients, a multitude of long-term sequelae are increasingly being reported. We report 4 cases with varying neuro-GI and motility manifestations after recent COVID-19 infection. Case Description/Methods: Case 1: A 23-year-old man contracted COVID-19 and had a protracted course of respiratory illness. Despite resolution of respiratory symptoms and dysgeusia, he continued to experience early satiety, postprandial nausea, vomiting and unintentional weight loss. Gastric Emptying Scan (GES) revealed gastroparesis (Figure A). Dietary modification and metoclopramide led to symptomatic improvement. Case 2: A 39-year-old woman with migraines, suffered from Covid-19 infection where anosmia and respiratory symptoms lasted for 2 weeks. Despite resolution of initial symptoms, she started experiencing nausea and vomiting, and reported stereotypical symptoms with complete absence of vomiting between episodes. Endoscopic examination, CT head and GES were normal. Urine tox screen was negative for cannabinoids. She responded favorably to amitriptyline and ondansetron. Case 3: A 47-year-old man started experiencing severe constipation associated with abdominal pain and bloating soon after being diagnosed with COVID-19. Three months after resolution of respiratory symptoms, in addition to constipation, he began reporting postprandial fullness, early satiation and epigastric pain. GES showed gastroparesis ( figure B) and a Sitzmarks Study revealed delayed colonic transit (Figure C). Prucalopride was started, leading to improvement in symptoms. Case 4: A 74-year-old woman with obesity and diabetes, was hospitalized and intubated for severe respiratory distress due to COVID-19. After discharge, she had persistent symptoms of brain fog, fatigue, dyspnea as well as diarrhea and abdominal cramping, persisting despite loperamide and dicyclomine. C. difficile toxin, random colonic biopsies and H2 breath test were unremarkable. Her symptoms eventually improved with rifaximin. Discussion(s): We report 4 cases with post-COVID gastroparesis, cyclical vomiting syndrome, pan-gut dysmotility, and post-infectious IBS phenotypes.The pathophysiology of post-infectious-gut-brain disorders is still obscure. The current conceptual framework implicates acquired neuropathy, altered motility, intestinal barrier disruption and persistent intestinal inflammation. Similar pathophysiology may be involved in COVID-19 infection leading to sustained neurogastroenterological dysfunction and gut dysmotility.

3.
Neurologic Clinics ; 41(1):193-213, 2023.
Article in English | Scopus | ID: covidwho-2241541
4.
Gastroenterology ; 162(7):S-854, 2022.
Article in English | EMBASE | ID: covidwho-1967377

ABSTRACT

Background: Optimizing management of gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) is important to preserve graft function after lung transplantation as patients with GERD are at higher risk of rejection. Patients with COVID-19 associated respiratory failure undergoing lung transplantation is an emerging subset of patients in which GERD pre- or post-transplant is not well characterized. Aim: To evaluate the prevalence and adverse effects of GERD both pre- and post-transplant in patients undergoing lung transplantation for severe COVID-19 infection. Methods: A retrospective review was conducted at a single academic medical center with a large multi-organ transplant program. All patients undergoing lung transplant due to COVID-19 from 2020-2021 were included in the study, with attention to pre- and post-operative physiological testing for GERD. Results: Seventeen patients were identified who had undergone lung transplant for COVID-19. All patients were male;52.9% (9/17) were Hispanic, 35.3% (6/17) Caucasian and 11.8% (2/17) Black. Median age was 50 (24- 70 years) with median time to transplant from documented infection of 131 days. A prehospitalization GERD diagnosis was found in 29.4% (5/17) patients, and two patients (11.8%) were taking prescribed proton-pump inhibitor (PPI) prior to their COVID-19 associated hospitalization. No patient underwent pre-transplant GERD testing, although three patients did undergo upper endoscopy for GI bleeding prior to transplant. Post-transplant, all patients were immediately treated with PPI per institutional protocol. 70.5% (12/17) patients reported post-transplant foregut symptoms including heartburn, regurgitation, dysphagia, early satiety, abdominal bloating/cramping, nausea and vomiting. All 17 patients had at least one symptomdriven foregut study such as a gastric emptying study, barium esophagram, upper endoscopy, esophageal manometry or pH testing. Three patients were referred for anti-reflux surgery (ARS) based on results of testing, including delayed gastric emptying, abnormal pH testing and bronchoscopy findings concerning for aspiration pneumonia. All three underwent Toupet fundoplication with or without hiatal hernia repair;one was performed early (< 3 mo) posttransplant, two occurred late (> 6 mo), and none had complications or symptom-based recurrence of reflux. Discussion: In this large single-center series of COVID-19 associated respiratory failure and lung transplant, pre-operative reflux testing could not be performed;however, post-transplant GERD symptoms were still routinely assessed and evaluated, prompting management with ARS in a small subset of patients, both early and late posttransplant, with resolution of GERD symptoms. Long-term outcomes of this unique group and comparison with others requiring transplant will necessitate further investigation to assess impact of GERD on allograft dysfunction.

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