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Combined partial posterior fundoplication with laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy for morbid obese patients with symptomatic GERD. Video case report.

İNTRODUCTION: Gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD), which can be seen in up to 30% in postoperative series, is perhaps the most important complication of sleeve gastrectomy(SG). The general trend for patients who are planning to have bariatric surgery and have symptomatic GERD, Roux-en-Y gastric bypass is the most common choice. CASE PRESENTATION AND MANAGEMENT: A 42-year-old female patient with a body mass index of 36 kg/m2 presented to our clinic with obesity and symptomatic GERD. She had been using proton pump inhibitör (PPI) regularly for 1 year. Preoperative endoscopy showed hiatal hernia but no esophagitis. The patient underwent ambulatory pH study and GERD was confirmed. The patient was scheduled to have laparoscopic hiatal hernia repair plus combined partial posterior fundoplication and sleeve gastrectomy. Hiatal hernia was repaired, gastric fundus was passed behind the esophagus and partial posterior fundoplication was performed, and than SG was completed. She stopped using PPI in the early postoperative period and her reflux symptoms disappeared completely. The patient lost 20 kg in the 3rd month (%40 ewl) and underwent controlled ambulatory pH moniterization and no reflux was detected. CONCLUSION: İn some cases this technique can be proposed to obese patients with GERD as a primary treatment modality. High numbers of patients and longer follow up care are needed to assess the long term efficacy and safety of this technique.

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