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: Online published version of an accepted article before publication in the final form. Journal Name: Journal of Case Reports and Images in Surgery Type of Article: Case Report Title: A rare case of Type III gastric volvulus: presentation and laparoscopic management Authors: Simeon Ngweso, Anand Trivedi, Senerath Werapitiya doi: To be assigned Early view version published: November 3, 2016 How to cite the article: Ngweso S, Trivedi A, Werapitiya S. A rare case of Type III gastric volvulus: presentation and laparoscopic management. Journal of Case Reports and Images in Surgery. Forthcoming 2016. Disclaimer: This manuscript has been accepted for publication. This is a pdf file of the. The is an online published version of an accepted article before publication in the final form. The proof of this manuscript will be sent to the authors for corrections after which this manuscript will undergo content check, copyediting/proofreading and content formatting to conform to journal s requirements. Please note that during the above publication processes errors in content or presentation may be discovered which will be rectified during manuscript processing. These errors may affect the contents of this manuscript and final published version of this manuscript may be extensively different in content and layout than this. Page 1 of 10

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 TYPE OF ARTICLE: Case Report TITLE: A rare case of Type III gastric volvulus: presentation and laparoscopic management AUTHORS: Simeon Ngweso 1, Anand Trivedi 2, Senerath Werapitiya 3 AFFILIATIONS: 1 B.Pharm, MBBS, Resident Medical Officer, Surgical Department, Royal Perth Hospital, Perth, Western Australia, Australia, Simeon.Ngweso@health.wa.gov.au 2 MBBS, MS (General Surgery), Advanced General Surgical Registrar, General Surgery Department, Bunbury Regional Hospital, Bunbury, Western Australia, Australia, Anand.Trivedi@health.wa.gov.au 3 MBBS, MS, FRCS, FRACS, General Surgery Consultant/Upper GI Consultant, General Surgery Department, Bunbury Regional Hospital, Bunbury, Western Australia, Australia, Senerath.Werapitiya@health.wa.gov.au CORRESPONDING AUTHOR DETAILS Simeon Ngweso 35B Caledonian Avenue, Maylands, Western Australia, Australia, 6051 Email: Simeon.Ngweso@health.wa.gov.au Short Running Title: A rare case of Type III gastric volvulus: presentation and laparoscopic management Guarantor of Submission: The corresponding author is the guarantor of submission. 29 30 31 32 Page 2 of 10

33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 TITLE: A rare case of Type III gastric volvulus: presentation and laparoscopic management ABSTRACT Introduction Gastric volvulus is a surgical emergency and a recognised complication of hiatal hernia. Type III gastric volvulus is the rarest variant and is characterised by gastric rotation about both the organoaxial and mesenterioaxial axes. Presentation and management of Type III gastric volvulus is not well described in the literature. Case Report 89 year old male presented with eight hours of coffee-ground vomiting. The patient was haemodynamically stable and examination was unremarkable. Imaging confirmed a large gastric volvulus. Gastric decompression was performed endoscopically and laparoscopy confirmed a huge Type III gastric volvulus with complex rotation of the stomach about both the organoaxial and mesenterioaxial axes. The stomach and distal oesophagus were laparoscopically mobilised to ensure adequate intra-abdominal oesophageal length. Due to the very large diaphragmatic defect, crural opposition was not possible so the stomach was fixed laparoscopically via gastropexy from the anterior abdominal wall to the diaphragm. The patient made an uneventful post-operative recovery. Three month follow-up confirmed no recurrent symptoms. Conclusion Gastric volvulus is rare but life-threatening. Type III gastric volvulus is the rarest variant with limited description in the literature. In this particular case, endoscopic decompression and laparoscopic reduction and fixation without fundoplication was a successful treatment modality. Keywords: Gastric volvulus, Laparoscopic surgery Page 3 of 10

65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 TITLE: A rare case of Type III gastric volvulus: presentation and laparoscopic management INTRODUCTION Gastric volvulus is a recognised complication of hiatal hernia and is characterised by abnormal rotation of the stomach by more than 180º resulting in a luminal obstruction [1]. Gastric volvulus is a rare disease with an unknown incidence primarily because the condition can occur in an acute or chronic variant [2]. Considered a surgical emergency, gastric volvulus has a non-operative mortality rate potentially as high as 80% [1, 3]. Type I or organo-axial gastric volvulus accounts for 60% of gastric volvulus and is characterised by the stomach rotating around its long axis [1]. Type II or mesenterioaxial volvulus occurs with rotation of the stomach along an axis perpendicular to its longitudinal axis [3]. In Type II volvulus, the stomach typically lies in a vertical plane, with the antrum and pylorus rotated anterior and superior to the gastroesophageal junction [3]. Almost 30% of cases are Type II gastric volvulus [2]. Rotation of the stomach about both the organoaxial and mesenterioaxial axes is a Type III or combined volvulus [1]. Type III volvulus is extremely rare, potentially only comprising 12% of all cases of gastric volvulus [2]. Due to its rarity, the presentation and management options of particularly Type III gastric volvulus is not well described in the literature. CASE REPORT 89 year old male presented to the emergency department with an eight hour history of coffee-ground vomiting. There was no associated abdominal pain or significant abdominal distension. No bowel changes, no fevers, no weight loss or night sweats and the patient had been well otherwise. The patient had a history of reflux, and was on a proton-pump inhibitor, had hypertension, hypercholesterolaemia and had undergone a previous open cholecystectomy. There was no history of malignancy or previous endoscopy. Upon presentation, the patient was haemodynamically stable and examination was unremarkable with a soft, non-peritonitic abdomen and no significant findings. Initial Page 4 of 10

97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 abdominal and chest X-Ray revealed a large hiatus hernia and follow-up CTabdomen confirmed the presence of a large, Type III gastric volvulus. (Figure 1) The patient was subsequently transferred to a larger, close-by hospital with surgical and endoscopic capabilities where he underwent urgent operative assessment. Gastroscopy and gastric decompression was performed with large amounts of haemorrhagic gastric contents being aspirated. Gastroscopy revealed early ischaemic changes of the gastric mucosa and confirmed a huge hiatus hernia with complex rotation of the stomach about both the organoaxial and mesenterioaxial axes. All contents of the mixed type volvulus were viable. The stomach and distal oesophagus were laparoscopically mobilised to ensure adequate intra-abdominal oesophageal length. Due to the very large diaphragmatic defect, crural opposition was not possible so the stomach was fixed laparoscopically via gastropexy from the anterior abdominal wall to the diaphragm using multiple sutures and small vypro mesh patches to facilitate the formation of adhesions and prevent recurrence. (Figure 2) Post-operatively, the patient was admitted to the high dependency unit for a period of observation. He was subsequently transferred to the general surgery ward where he remained for one week undergoing physiotherapy and being treated with DVT prophylaxis, analgesia and empirical antibiotics for potential aspiration. Once clinically stable and after being cleared by allied health, the patient was successfully discharged home. At three month follow-up, the patient has denied any major reflux symptoms or post-prandial early satiety. DISCUSSION Gastric volvulus is a potential complication of hiatus hernia and is characterised by abnormal rotation of the stomach by more than 180º [1]. Gastric volvulus was first described in 1866 by Berti, based on the autopsy of a 61-year old woman [3]. Gastric volvulus is a rare condition that can prove to be a diagnostic dilemma; however it is life-threatening and requires prompt diagnosis and treatment as delay can result in obstruction, incarceration, perforation and ultimately death [3, 4]. Page 5 of 10

128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 Treatment of gastric volvulus involves decompression, reduction and prevention of recurrence with laparoscopic or open repair providing the mainstays of interventional therapy [3, 5]. Laparoscopic repair has proven to be feasible and safe and provides the standard approach in many centres [1, 6]. Fundoplication has been suggested as a mandatory part of operative management as it prevents reflux and provides a good anchor for the repair [6]. However, following a recent retrospective review of cases, Light et al concluded that in a frail elderly patient with a large hiatal defect, consideration may be given to reducing the stomach with fixation via anterior abdominal and diaphragmatic gastropexy without hiatal repair [7]. Good outcomes were found with both gastropexy with or without fundoplication with the decision dependent on factor including the status of the patient during surgery and integrity of the stomach [7]. Similarly, a review of a case series by Yates et al determined that for surgeons not comfortable performing an urgent laparoscopic gastric hernia repair, laparoscopic gastropexy is a technically less challenging operation that can alleviate acute gastric volvulus and relieve gastric outlet obstruction [8]. Laparoscopic gastropexy without fundoplication also facilitates successful treatment of the acute obstruction while allowing referral to a tertiary centre where definitive hiatal repair can occur if necessary and also reduces operative time which is beneficial for patients at high surgical risk [8]. There is however limited information regarding the management options pertaining specifically to Type III gastric volvulus. Similar to accepted practice for other forms of gastric volvulus, a management approach implementing decompression, reduction and fixation would be considered appropriate and in this particular case proved to be successful. CONCLUSION Gastric volvulus, particularly the Type III variant, is a rare surgical emergency. Endoscopic decompression with laparoscopic reduction is a viable treatment modality. Fundoplication is generally recommended, however fixation via anterior abdominal and diaphragmatic gastropexy without fundoplication is acceptable in a frail, elderly patient with a large defect. 159 Page 6 of 10

160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 CONFLICT OF INTEREST The authors declare no conflict of interest AUTHOR S CONTRIBUTIONS Simeon Ngweso Group1 - Conception and design, Acquisition of data, Analysis and interpretation of data Group 2 - Drafting the article, Critical revision of the article Group 3 - Final approval of the version to be published Anand Trivedi Group1 - Conception and design, Acquisition of data, Analysis and interpretation of data Group 2 - Drafting the article, Critical revision of the article Group 3 - Final approval of the version to be published Senarath Werapitiya Group1 - Conception and design, Acquisition of data, Analysis and interpretation of data Group 2 - Drafting the article, Critical revision of the article Group 3 - Final approval of the version to be published REFERENCES 1. McElreath D, Olden KW, Aduli F. Hiccups: a subtle sign in the clinical diagnosis of gastric volvulus and a review of the literature. Digest Dis Sci 2008;53(11):3033-3036 2. Chau B, Dufel S. Gastric Volvulus. Emerg Med J 2007;24(6):446-447 3. Rashid F, Thangarajah T, Mulvey D, Larvin M, Iftikhar SY. A review article on gastric volvulus: A challenge to diagnosis and management. Int J Surg 2010;8(1):18-24 Page 7 of 10

190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 4. Inaba K, Sakurai Y, Isogaki J, Komori Y, Uyama I. Laparoscopic repair of hiatal hernia with mesenterioaxial volvulus of the stomach. World J Gastroenterol 2011;17(15):2054-2057 5. Black TP, Verma LM. A Twisted Tale: Chronic abdominal pain caused by gastric volvulus. AM J Med 2014;127(9):19-20 6. Iannelli A, Fabiani P, Karimdjee BS, Habre J, Lopez S, Gugenheim J. Laparoscopic repair of intrathoracic mesenterioaxial volvulus of the stomach in an adult: report of a case. Surg Today 2003;33(10):761-763 7. Light D, Links D, Griffin M. The threatened stomach: management of the acute gastric volvulus. Surg Endosc 2015;30(5):1847-1852. Epub 2015 Aug 15 8. Yates R, Hinojosa MW, Wright AS, Pellegrini CA, Oelschlager BK. Laparoscopic gastropexy relieves symptoms of obstructed gastric volvulus in high operative risk patients. Am J Surg 2015;209(5):875-880 FIGURE LEGENDS Figure 1: Radiological (plain films and CT) confirmation of large hiatal hernia with volvulus which has resulted in the pars media and antrum passing through the oesophageal hiatus into the stomach. Figure 2: Laparoscopic reduction of the volvulus, resection of the hernia sac, gastropexy and utilisation of vypro patches to facilitate formation of adhesions. 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 Page 8 of 10

222 FIGURES 223 224 225 226 227 228 Figure 1: Radiological (plain films and CT) confirmation of large hiatal hernia with volvulus which has resulted in the pars media and antrum passing through the oesophageal hiatus into the stomach. 229 Page 9 of 10

230 231 232 233 Figure 2: Laparoscopic reduction of the volvulus, resection of the hernia sac, gastropexy and utilisation of vypro patches to facilitate formation of adhesions. Page 10 of 10