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Gastric remnant reconstruction with left gastroepiploic artery supercharge after esophagectomy in a patient with an occluded right gastroepiploic artery: A technical and case report.

INTRODUCTION: Gastric remnant reconstruction is commonly used for esophagectomy reconstruction. However, standard reconstruction cannot be performed in some patients with a specific medical history. We report a case of esophagectomy and gastric remnant reconstruction with left gastroepiploic artery (LGEA) supercharge to treat esophageal cancer in a patient in whom the right gastroepiploic artery (RGEA) had previously been occluded.

PRESENTATION OF CASE: A 65-year-old man underwent endoscopic submucosal dissection for thoracic esophageal squamous cell carcinoma. He was diagnosed with pathological T1b cancer with lymphatic invasion and a positive horizontal margin, and needed curative resection. He had previously undergone RGEA embolization to treat a pseudoaneurysm caused by chronic pancreatitis. We successfully performed esophagectomy and gastric remnant reconstruction with preoperative left gastric artery embolization and intraoperative LGEA supercharge.

DISCUSSION: An absent RGEA blood supply is not always a contraindication for gastric remnant reconstruction when the collateral blood flows are well developed and supercharge can maintain the blood supply to the gastric remnant.

CONCLUSIONS: Gastric remnant reconstruction with preoperative selective arterial embolization and intraoperative supercharge represents one of the options for high-risk patients with an altered gastric blood supply.

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