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High-resolution manometry is superior to endoscopy and radiology in assessing and grading sliding hiatal hernia: A comparison with surgical in vivo evaluation

Authors :
Manuele Furnari
Ludovico Docimo
Nicola de Bortoli
Marzio Frazzoni
Giovanni Zaninotto
Giorgia Bodini
Salvatore Tolone
Gianmattia del Genio
Leonardo Frazzoni
C. Prakash Gyawali
Vincenzo Savarino
Edoardo Savarino
Tolone S.
Savarino E.
Zaninotto G.
Gyawali C.P.
Frazzoni M.
de Bortoli N.
Frazzoni L.
del Genio G.
Bodini G.
Furnari M.
Savarino V.
Docimo L.
Tolone, Salvatore
Savarino, Edoardo
Zaninotto, Giovanni
Gyawali, C Prakash
Frazzoni, Marzio
de Bortoli, Nicola
Frazzoni, Leonardo
del Genio, Gianmattia
Bodini, Giorgia
Furnari, Manuele
Savarino, Vincenzo
Docimo, Ludovico
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
SAGE Publications, 2018.

Abstract

Background: Hiatal hernia is diagnosed by barium-swallow esophagogram or esophagogastroduodenoscopy, with possible suboptimal results. High-resolution manometry clearly identifies crural diaphragm and lower esophageal sphincter. Objectives: To assess the diagnostic accuracy of high-resolution manometry in detecting hiatal hernia compared to esophagogram and esophagogastroduodenoscopy, using as reference the surgical invivo measurement. Methods: Patients were studied with esophagogram, esophagogastroduodenoscopy, high-resolution manometry and invivo evaluation of the esophago-gastric junction. Esophago-gastric junction was classified as type I (no separation between crural diaphragm and lower esophageal sphincter); type II (≥1, ≤ 2 cm separation); type III (>2 cm). During invivo measurement, distance between the esophago-gastric junction and crural diaphragm proximal border was recorded. Results: Surgery identified 53 hiatal hernias in 100 patients. Forty-seven percent were classified as type I esophago-gastric junction, 35% type II and 18% type III. Referenced to invivo evaluation, high-resolution manometry showed superior diagnostic sensitivity and specificity (94.3% and 91.5%, respectively) to esophagogram and esophagogastroduodenoscopy, with 92.6% predictive value of a positive test and 93.5% predictive value of a negative test. The kappa value for high-resolution manometry and invivo evaluation was 0.85. High-resolution manometry showed optimal sensitivity and specificity in detecting types I, II and III esophago-gastric junction. Conclusions: High-resolution manometry enables an accurate diagnosis of hiatal hernia and a better classification than endoscopy and radiology, reaching optimal agreement with invivo assessment.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4139c8f79af74a08fcfd77d14d26c947