REVOLUTIONARY NON-INVASIVE
SURGERY FOR ACID REFLUX DISEASE NOW AVAILABLE AT MERCY MEDICAL
CENTER
Hospital Is First In The Northeast
To Perform Incisionless Transoral Procedure To Treat Chronic Heartburn
(June 12, 2008 - Rockville Centre,
NY) - Mercy Medical Center has become the first
hospital in the Northeast to offer a new, revolutionary non-invasive
procedure that surgically treats chronic heartburn resulting
from GastroEsophageal Reflux Disease (GERD).
A team headed by Shawn Garber, MD, Chief of Bariatric Surgery
at Mercy, with colleague Spencer Holover, MD, is one of only
a handful in the entire country to offer the technique, known
as EsophyXTM Transoral Incisionless Fundoplication (TIF), a
form of Natural Orifice Surgery (NOS) in which a device for
performing reconstructive gastrointestinal procedures is introduced
into the body through the mouth, rather than through an abdominal
incision.
“EsophyX transoral incisionless surgery provides an important
new option in the treatment of intractable acid reflux disease,”
explained Dr. Garber, who heads the New York Bariatric Group.
“Unlike conventional laparoscopic procedures for surgical remediation
of GERD, the transoral technique that introduces the surgical
instruments through the mouth, reduces the risk of infection
from incisions, preserves future treatment options, nearly eliminates
pain for the patient, and requires less recovery time.”
In the first operation of its kind in the Northeast, the team
at Mercy Medical Center recently performed the EsophyX procedure
several weeks ago on a 65-year-old New Jersey woman who had
been experiencing severe heartburn from acid reflux disease
for many years, and had obtained no relief from dietary and
lifestyle changes, or any over-the-counter or prescription medication
treatments. As a result of the surgery, her GERD has dissipated
and she no longer requires medication.
It’s been estimated that as many as one in four people in Western
nations suffer from heartburn at least once per month; that
12 percent experience the burning and pain at least once per
week; and that more than 5 percent suffer on a daily basis.
Those experiencing heartburn twice a week or more over a six
month period are likely to have GastroEsophageal Reflux Disease,
which results from excess stomach acid backing-up into the esophagus
(the tube connecting the mouth to the stomach) due the failure
of a muscular valve at the bottom of the esophagus to close
properly.
Dietary and lifestyle changes, as well as over-the-counter
and prescription medications treat GERD by reducing the amount
of acid produced in the stomach. Medications can alleviate symptoms
but generally do not stop the progression of the condition,
and often must be taken for the rest of a patient’s life. For
severe cases, conventional laparoscopic surgery can repair the
gastroesophageal valve with instruments introduced into the
abdomen through small incisions. The EsophyX transoral procedure,
developed by EndoGastric SolutionsTM of Redmond, Washington,
eliminates the need for incisions, and the associated pain and
risk of infection, by introducing the surgical instruments through
the patient’s mouth.
A similar bariatric procedure, called StomaphyXTM, for reducing
the size of a patient’s stomach for individuals who gain weight
a few years after gastric bypass surgery, has been available
at Mercy Medical Center since last July.
Information about transoral surgery at Mercy Medical Center
is available by calling: 516-62MERCY
# # #
Contact: Mel Granick
Phone: (516) 705-2618
e-Mail: Mel.Granick@chsli.org
|