A case of using the remnant stomach as substitute after esophagectomy for esophageal cancer with history of distal gastrectomy

2007 
A 63-year-old man who had a distal subtotal gastrectomy and retrocolic end-to-side gastrojejunostomy was admitted because of a mid-thoracic esophageal cancer. He underwent a two-stage subtotal esophagectomy and reconstruction using the remnant stomach without microvascular anastomosis. We preserved the splenic artery, splenic vein, and the short gastric artery. The remnant stomach was pulled up together with the pancreas through the anterior sternal route. The superiority of this technique is that microvascular anastomosis is not needed because a sufficient blood supply from the splenic artery and only two anastomoses are needed, compared with three or four anastomoses when using the colon. This technique is also likely to be safer for patients requiring an esophagectomy after a distal gastrectomy.
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