Median Arcuate Ligament Syndrome (MALS)

Posted by Kari Ulrich, Alumna Mentor @kariulrich, Dec 26, 2016

I am looking for other patients that have been diagnosed with Median Arcuate Ligament Syndrome. Although it is caused by compression of the celiac artery many people experience abdominal pain after eating, diarrhea, food avoidance. Usually the first doctors they see are GI doctors. It is a diagnosis that is made after everything else is ruled out. I am curious if anyone else has had surgery?

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Hello @annief . Sorry to hear you are not feeling well. MALS is a really tricky and complicated disease/diagnosis. I don't think any two people are the same. Usually all have general similar symptoms like you have described. My MALS was found by accident. I have always had stomach issues since I was little. Told IBS and had ulcers. About 4 years ago, the pain was so bad I decided to go to the er just for pain meds or something. They insisted on ct scan. The dr. came out and asked if I knew that my arteries were narrowed. I was like I don't know. He said I should see a vascular surgeon. I told my pcp an he got me into a University teaching hospital and with the chief of vascular surgery. I had no idea what was going on. They did the doppler and said my velocities in the celiac and SMA were literally off the charts and I needed surgery right away. I was a teacher and asked to wait for spring break he said no. I thought ok, I took a month off. Wow was I wrong. Now of course mine was different. I had two arteries and they were severely compressed and it was a mess and about 8 hr surgery. I did feel better after. Long difficult recovery, plus a lot of personal stresses, family deaths, which didn't not help. But my arteries were good. However, 5 months later they were narrowing again. My surgery was Feb. 2014, In Sept. 2015 I got stents put into each artery. It would have been best to do a bypass, but I physically could not handle that. I did feel relief again. Then it came back. I also had SIBO, which is a big issue to watch for. I was getting confused of what was what. If that is caught and taken care of, I think it would be fine. Mine wasn't. Oct. 2017 I had a balloon in the celiac. For me this will be a life long thing. That doesn't mean for you. I have heard people have open surgery and in a month feel a lot better and continue on that path. There are many that have had laparoscopic an out of the hospital in like 3 days and done great. It depends on the situation. If you are unsure I would definitely get a second opinion. I think, personally, it should be a vascular surgeon. I have not had luck with GI drs even acknowledging that MALS is causing damage to the stomach. I have heard though some GI drs were great in diagnosis of it.
Sorry not much help. As for eating, I used to try to stay away from certain foods. Honestly it didn't matter. Just depended on the day and how bad my symptoms were. Water is really hard for me. Weird I know, but if I am really thirsty and drink more than a couple of sips, it hurts so bad, even now. I would definitely eat SMALL MEALS and more often throughout the day. If you have a problem with eating, and one day something sounds good and is working, eat it all day, who cares as long as you get something in you.

Well good luck to you. Oh and I was 47 when I was diagnosed and my surgeon said I was young, but I don't think he realized it was truly MALS until he went in and saw the diaphragm compression. I don't think age matters so much as the shape and health you are in. Feel free to ask any questions. Don't know if this helped any....

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@jmmb

Hello @annief . Sorry to hear you are not feeling well. MALS is a really tricky and complicated disease/diagnosis. I don't think any two people are the same. Usually all have general similar symptoms like you have described. My MALS was found by accident. I have always had stomach issues since I was little. Told IBS and had ulcers. About 4 years ago, the pain was so bad I decided to go to the er just for pain meds or something. They insisted on ct scan. The dr. came out and asked if I knew that my arteries were narrowed. I was like I don't know. He said I should see a vascular surgeon. I told my pcp an he got me into a University teaching hospital and with the chief of vascular surgery. I had no idea what was going on. They did the doppler and said my velocities in the celiac and SMA were literally off the charts and I needed surgery right away. I was a teacher and asked to wait for spring break he said no. I thought ok, I took a month off. Wow was I wrong. Now of course mine was different. I had two arteries and they were severely compressed and it was a mess and about 8 hr surgery. I did feel better after. Long difficult recovery, plus a lot of personal stresses, family deaths, which didn't not help. But my arteries were good. However, 5 months later they were narrowing again. My surgery was Feb. 2014, In Sept. 2015 I got stents put into each artery. It would have been best to do a bypass, but I physically could not handle that. I did feel relief again. Then it came back. I also had SIBO, which is a big issue to watch for. I was getting confused of what was what. If that is caught and taken care of, I think it would be fine. Mine wasn't. Oct. 2017 I had a balloon in the celiac. For me this will be a life long thing. That doesn't mean for you. I have heard people have open surgery and in a month feel a lot better and continue on that path. There are many that have had laparoscopic an out of the hospital in like 3 days and done great. It depends on the situation. If you are unsure I would definitely get a second opinion. I think, personally, it should be a vascular surgeon. I have not had luck with GI drs even acknowledging that MALS is causing damage to the stomach. I have heard though some GI drs were great in diagnosis of it.
Sorry not much help. As for eating, I used to try to stay away from certain foods. Honestly it didn't matter. Just depended on the day and how bad my symptoms were. Water is really hard for me. Weird I know, but if I am really thirsty and drink more than a couple of sips, it hurts so bad, even now. I would definitely eat SMALL MEALS and more often throughout the day. If you have a problem with eating, and one day something sounds good and is working, eat it all day, who cares as long as you get something in you.

Well good luck to you. Oh and I was 47 when I was diagnosed and my surgeon said I was young, but I don't think he realized it was truly MALS until he went in and saw the diaphragm compression. I don't think age matters so much as the shape and health you are in. Feel free to ask any questions. Don't know if this helped any....

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Hi @jmmb,

Thanks so much for sharing this information! I can’t imagine dealing with this for as long as you have. This is definitely a frustrating diagnosis. After reading the post and at the recommendation of my pcp, it sounds like I definitely need more test and information. While I am eating small meals, I still have issues. The vascular doc that was consulted in the hospital has referred me to another vascular doc so I will call him tomorrow. The information I have gathered from this site has made me better prepared with questions I will ask the new doc.

If anyone in the Dallas area can recommend doctors experienced in this, I would appreciate it. Thanks!

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@jmmb

Hello @annief . Sorry to hear you are not feeling well. MALS is a really tricky and complicated disease/diagnosis. I don't think any two people are the same. Usually all have general similar symptoms like you have described. My MALS was found by accident. I have always had stomach issues since I was little. Told IBS and had ulcers. About 4 years ago, the pain was so bad I decided to go to the er just for pain meds or something. They insisted on ct scan. The dr. came out and asked if I knew that my arteries were narrowed. I was like I don't know. He said I should see a vascular surgeon. I told my pcp an he got me into a University teaching hospital and with the chief of vascular surgery. I had no idea what was going on. They did the doppler and said my velocities in the celiac and SMA were literally off the charts and I needed surgery right away. I was a teacher and asked to wait for spring break he said no. I thought ok, I took a month off. Wow was I wrong. Now of course mine was different. I had two arteries and they were severely compressed and it was a mess and about 8 hr surgery. I did feel better after. Long difficult recovery, plus a lot of personal stresses, family deaths, which didn't not help. But my arteries were good. However, 5 months later they were narrowing again. My surgery was Feb. 2014, In Sept. 2015 I got stents put into each artery. It would have been best to do a bypass, but I physically could not handle that. I did feel relief again. Then it came back. I also had SIBO, which is a big issue to watch for. I was getting confused of what was what. If that is caught and taken care of, I think it would be fine. Mine wasn't. Oct. 2017 I had a balloon in the celiac. For me this will be a life long thing. That doesn't mean for you. I have heard people have open surgery and in a month feel a lot better and continue on that path. There are many that have had laparoscopic an out of the hospital in like 3 days and done great. It depends on the situation. If you are unsure I would definitely get a second opinion. I think, personally, it should be a vascular surgeon. I have not had luck with GI drs even acknowledging that MALS is causing damage to the stomach. I have heard though some GI drs were great in diagnosis of it.
Sorry not much help. As for eating, I used to try to stay away from certain foods. Honestly it didn't matter. Just depended on the day and how bad my symptoms were. Water is really hard for me. Weird I know, but if I am really thirsty and drink more than a couple of sips, it hurts so bad, even now. I would definitely eat SMALL MEALS and more often throughout the day. If you have a problem with eating, and one day something sounds good and is working, eat it all day, who cares as long as you get something in you.

Well good luck to you. Oh and I was 47 when I was diagnosed and my surgeon said I was young, but I don't think he realized it was truly MALS until he went in and saw the diaphragm compression. I don't think age matters so much as the shape and health you are in. Feel free to ask any questions. Don't know if this helped any....

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Hi @annief ,
My original surgeon that did my surgery is a Baylor University Hospital and he is chief of vascular surgery. His name is Joseph Mills. He was really great. You can go to their web site and look under vascular surgeons. I learned so much from this site. I had no idea going in to my surgery. I learned it all after. The more knowledge you have, the better you will be able to make decisions. Good luck!

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@kanaazpereira

I'm so glad to know that you're progressing well, @annief; welcome to Connect. I'm certain @kariulrich @jmmb @pfpurple @tclarkkkk and others in this incredibly informative group will join in with their thoughts as well.

Would you share more about how you are managing your diet? Do you have any restrictions, or are you able to include everything in your diet? Has your doctor suggested any next steps?

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@annief How are you doing??? Feeling any better? Did smaller meals work? I eat small meals 8-10 times a day... so basically snacking all day. I always eat a carb with a fruit, then carb with a vegetable, carb with protein... mostly crackers or chocolate seem to be working well for me. I also take multi vit. I do not drink with food. So I drink water or tea through out the day. I have recently started drinking a red bull energy drink (the one with sugar) because my energy levels get so low around 11-12pm... it can make your pulse go up if your not use to the caffeine. ( The caffeine has really cut back on my headaches).

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@jmmb

Hello @annief . Sorry to hear you are not feeling well. MALS is a really tricky and complicated disease/diagnosis. I don't think any two people are the same. Usually all have general similar symptoms like you have described. My MALS was found by accident. I have always had stomach issues since I was little. Told IBS and had ulcers. About 4 years ago, the pain was so bad I decided to go to the er just for pain meds or something. They insisted on ct scan. The dr. came out and asked if I knew that my arteries were narrowed. I was like I don't know. He said I should see a vascular surgeon. I told my pcp an he got me into a University teaching hospital and with the chief of vascular surgery. I had no idea what was going on. They did the doppler and said my velocities in the celiac and SMA were literally off the charts and I needed surgery right away. I was a teacher and asked to wait for spring break he said no. I thought ok, I took a month off. Wow was I wrong. Now of course mine was different. I had two arteries and they were severely compressed and it was a mess and about 8 hr surgery. I did feel better after. Long difficult recovery, plus a lot of personal stresses, family deaths, which didn't not help. But my arteries were good. However, 5 months later they were narrowing again. My surgery was Feb. 2014, In Sept. 2015 I got stents put into each artery. It would have been best to do a bypass, but I physically could not handle that. I did feel relief again. Then it came back. I also had SIBO, which is a big issue to watch for. I was getting confused of what was what. If that is caught and taken care of, I think it would be fine. Mine wasn't. Oct. 2017 I had a balloon in the celiac. For me this will be a life long thing. That doesn't mean for you. I have heard people have open surgery and in a month feel a lot better and continue on that path. There are many that have had laparoscopic an out of the hospital in like 3 days and done great. It depends on the situation. If you are unsure I would definitely get a second opinion. I think, personally, it should be a vascular surgeon. I have not had luck with GI drs even acknowledging that MALS is causing damage to the stomach. I have heard though some GI drs were great in diagnosis of it.
Sorry not much help. As for eating, I used to try to stay away from certain foods. Honestly it didn't matter. Just depended on the day and how bad my symptoms were. Water is really hard for me. Weird I know, but if I am really thirsty and drink more than a couple of sips, it hurts so bad, even now. I would definitely eat SMALL MEALS and more often throughout the day. If you have a problem with eating, and one day something sounds good and is working, eat it all day, who cares as long as you get something in you.

Well good luck to you. Oh and I was 47 when I was diagnosed and my surgeon said I was young, but I don't think he realized it was truly MALS until he went in and saw the diaphragm compression. I don't think age matters so much as the shape and health you are in. Feel free to ask any questions. Don't know if this helped any....

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I may know of someone... not positive if the is the Dallas area of Texas. I will check with a friend of mine and let you know. If you can travel I would recommend Mayo, Cleveland Clinic, or University of Virginia .

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My Daughter is majoring in Piano Performance and composition. As a piano student she practiced daily, she also accompanied for an opera, performed her Junior Recital, plays in church and at a restaurant on Friday evenings, when she complained of her wrists hurting we figured it was tendonitis until other joints began hurting. We took her to the doctor who diagnosed her with Lyme’s. She started taking an antibiotic and had a reaction resulting in migraine headaches and nausea. She promptly started amoxicillin and the symptoms subsided for a few days until she woke us up saying she had to go to the hospital not tomorrow but right now, this minute. The symptoms have continued and she has been diagnosed with MAL’s

Last week she had a CT Angiogram, which indicated a median ligament syndrome with clinical symptomatology. The video indicated two abnormalities, first a necking of the celiac Artery also revealed in a CT-scan two years when she had her appendix removed but not as severe an at present. Second, the path of the artery branching from the aorta has a narrow radius, 300-degree upward path rather than a long radius 210-degree path.

Her Doctor has performed orthoscopic surgeries to correct the celiac Artery Compression, and he recommended we have Emily consult with an Infectious Disease specialist and a Gastrologist before considering surgery. The Doctor also gave us a list of local surgeons and surgeons from the Mayo Clinic and Cleveland Clinic who perform this procedure using Orthoscopic or robotic surgery. Emily is suffering more than discomfort from this condition and we would all like to correct it as soon as possible; however, there are risks to mitigate.

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@pianoplayer

My Daughter is majoring in Piano Performance and composition. As a piano student she practiced daily, she also accompanied for an opera, performed her Junior Recital, plays in church and at a restaurant on Friday evenings, when she complained of her wrists hurting we figured it was tendonitis until other joints began hurting. We took her to the doctor who diagnosed her with Lyme’s. She started taking an antibiotic and had a reaction resulting in migraine headaches and nausea. She promptly started amoxicillin and the symptoms subsided for a few days until she woke us up saying she had to go to the hospital not tomorrow but right now, this minute. The symptoms have continued and she has been diagnosed with MAL’s

Last week she had a CT Angiogram, which indicated a median ligament syndrome with clinical symptomatology. The video indicated two abnormalities, first a necking of the celiac Artery also revealed in a CT-scan two years when she had her appendix removed but not as severe an at present. Second, the path of the artery branching from the aorta has a narrow radius, 300-degree upward path rather than a long radius 210-degree path.

Her Doctor has performed orthoscopic surgeries to correct the celiac Artery Compression, and he recommended we have Emily consult with an Infectious Disease specialist and a Gastrologist before considering surgery. The Doctor also gave us a list of local surgeons and surgeons from the Mayo Clinic and Cleveland Clinic who perform this procedure using Orthoscopic or robotic surgery. Emily is suffering more than discomfort from this condition and we would all like to correct it as soon as possible; however, there are risks to mitigate.

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@pianoplayer Welcome to our group I am happy you have found us. What a dedicated daughter you have, to be able to play piano at her level is quite an achievement. She has determination and that will serve her well in coping with this diagnosis. Yes there are risks to mitigate and making the decision to opt with surgical intervention is a difficult one. May I ask the age of your daughter? I agree with your doctor that consulting with other specialties first is the path to go, as you want to make sure all diagnosis and options are exhausted before you consider the surgery. I know the pain she is suffering is unbearable to watch, is she able to eat small meals or lost any weight? Both Cleveland Clinic and Mayo Clinic have excellent physicians that treat MALS so I know she will be in good hands. Please feel free to ask questions we have a great group of people here with lots of experience, we may not always have an answer but we are able to share our experiences with you.

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@pianoplayer

My Daughter is majoring in Piano Performance and composition. As a piano student she practiced daily, she also accompanied for an opera, performed her Junior Recital, plays in church and at a restaurant on Friday evenings, when she complained of her wrists hurting we figured it was tendonitis until other joints began hurting. We took her to the doctor who diagnosed her with Lyme’s. She started taking an antibiotic and had a reaction resulting in migraine headaches and nausea. She promptly started amoxicillin and the symptoms subsided for a few days until she woke us up saying she had to go to the hospital not tomorrow but right now, this minute. The symptoms have continued and she has been diagnosed with MAL’s

Last week she had a CT Angiogram, which indicated a median ligament syndrome with clinical symptomatology. The video indicated two abnormalities, first a necking of the celiac Artery also revealed in a CT-scan two years when she had her appendix removed but not as severe an at present. Second, the path of the artery branching from the aorta has a narrow radius, 300-degree upward path rather than a long radius 210-degree path.

Her Doctor has performed orthoscopic surgeries to correct the celiac Artery Compression, and he recommended we have Emily consult with an Infectious Disease specialist and a Gastrologist before considering surgery. The Doctor also gave us a list of local surgeons and surgeons from the Mayo Clinic and Cleveland Clinic who perform this procedure using Orthoscopic or robotic surgery. Emily is suffering more than discomfort from this condition and we would all like to correct it as soon as possible; however, there are risks to mitigate.

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Pardon my redundancy in the following:
We celebrated Emily’s 21st birthday last week. Tomorrow we will be seeing a surgeon with capability in performing robotic celiac artery release surgery versus the initial vascular surgeon who diagnosed Emily with MALS who prefers laparoscopic surgery. Emily will also be seeing an Infectious disease specialist and a Gastrologist in a few days.

Two weeks Before her MALS diagnosis , Emily was diagnosed with Lyme’s Disease, and given Doxycycline, an antibiotic that resulted in Emily having migraine and abdominal pain. The doctor immediately put her on amoxicillin a generic antibiotic. The migraines stopped however the abdominal pain continued and led to a trip to the hospital emergency clinic, Emily’s Doctor prescribed a CT scan, which revealed celiac artery compression. We have a cousin who I found has MALS; however, Emily’s vascular surgeon said there is no data supporting hereditary disposition to MALS

I am concerned with the number of patients on the Mayo Clinic Forum who have had MALS symptoms return after surgery; even when the initial procedure included release the celiac artery, removal of ganglion nerve, and an angiogram detecting no compression of the celiac artery.

Yesterday I spoke to a person who had laparoscopic surgery releasing the celiac artery she said the ganglion nerve was not removed. She now feels fine after over two years of sudden attacks, which would result with her in a hospital emergency clinic, yet for two years there was no diagnosis of MALS until recently. Emily’s symptoms are different with constant chest pain around the solar plexus and abdominal pain after eating. Emily has had a CT scan two years ago when she had an appendectomy which when recently reviewed showed necking of the celiac artery. She recently had a CT and an angiogram, which showed the Celiac Artery compression. Emily has not had a Plexus blocker, which may relieve pain but would not cure the problem.

Should a Plexus Block be done before surgery. Should a celiac artery release procedure include a removal of the ganglion nerve “just for good measure”? If Emily were to have surgery to release the celiac artery, I want to be sure all that all necessary procedures are complete and thorough, which may include removal of the ganglion nerve bundle, yet I am sure the patients and their surgeons who have had symptoms return initially felt the same. I also question pros and cons about Laparoscopic versus Robotic surgery and also choosing a vascular surgeon specializing in celiac artery release surgery of MALS, versus a highly qualified surgeon in vascular surgery with high honors in his field with experience but not specializing in performing celiac artery release surgery.

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@pianoplayer

My Daughter is majoring in Piano Performance and composition. As a piano student she practiced daily, she also accompanied for an opera, performed her Junior Recital, plays in church and at a restaurant on Friday evenings, when she complained of her wrists hurting we figured it was tendonitis until other joints began hurting. We took her to the doctor who diagnosed her with Lyme’s. She started taking an antibiotic and had a reaction resulting in migraine headaches and nausea. She promptly started amoxicillin and the symptoms subsided for a few days until she woke us up saying she had to go to the hospital not tomorrow but right now, this minute. The symptoms have continued and she has been diagnosed with MAL’s

Last week she had a CT Angiogram, which indicated a median ligament syndrome with clinical symptomatology. The video indicated two abnormalities, first a necking of the celiac Artery also revealed in a CT-scan two years when she had her appendix removed but not as severe an at present. Second, the path of the artery branching from the aorta has a narrow radius, 300-degree upward path rather than a long radius 210-degree path.

Her Doctor has performed orthoscopic surgeries to correct the celiac Artery Compression, and he recommended we have Emily consult with an Infectious Disease specialist and a Gastrologist before considering surgery. The Doctor also gave us a list of local surgeons and surgeons from the Mayo Clinic and Cleveland Clinic who perform this procedure using Orthoscopic or robotic surgery. Emily is suffering more than discomfort from this condition and we would all like to correct it as soon as possible; however, there are risks to mitigate.

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@pianoplayer your concerns are valid. I will say I have had surgery twice, and you will see that the people posting are what I consider "Chronic MALS" patients; however, we do not hear from the patients that have had great success from procedures but I do know they exist. It is uncommon to be chronic. Additionally, in my humble opinion, MALS pain is multifaceted. The cause of the pain is not fully understood, I believe there is a vascular component, a nerve component and an anatomy component. The ganglion tissue alone (nerve component) is so complex- it is thought to be the second brain the body. I have had ganglion tissue removed, which was helpful for awhile ...3 years to be precise and the next surgery they injected me with steroids to calm down the nerves. I have also had 2 blocks. I have heard that many vascular surgeons recommended blocks prior to surgery as it has been an indicator if the surgery will be a success. Emily is still young, so her chances of surgery being successful are greater in my opinion. My first surgery I was in my 40's and my artery just could not open up like it should (arteries are flexible...however like a garden hose, kink it for 40 years and it will be difficult to get the kink out). Hope that makes some sense and helps you??

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I was diagnosed with MALS in Feb. 2018

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