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DiscussionPost-Nissen Fundoplication Problems: What helps?
Digestive Health | Last Active: Sep 18 9:39am | Replies (156)Comment receiving replies
Replies to "I am so sorry you are going through this all. My Grandsin had 2 full wraps..."
I'm so very sorry to hear about your grandson, very difficult to watch. I DID have 2 gastric emptying studies, one showed food in my tummy after 18 hrs. of no food, the next one was negative.
I am considering asking my GI provider to order another one, since I do feel I'm not digesting food properly at all. But since I just had brain shunt surgery, I think I'm going to wait a bit to get the study done. Thank you so much for the warm wishes! Much appreciated!
I had a 360 Nissan done in 2007 at Johns Hopkins. The wrap was way too tight. I had several balloon dilations over the next few years and finally had a revision of the Nissen to a 270 wrap performed by the same surgeon. A year after the first Nissen I started to gain weight which I desperately wanted to do; however, I also had new GI issues including a a growing stomach/abdomen that was rock hard, severe constipation (prior to the surgery I had IBS-D), and nausea. The 270 didn’t do much - I still get esophageal spasms, food gets stuck where the wrap is, & I have to take reflux meds bc food & liquids come back up into my mouth. Over the next 2 years my stomach got increasingly bigger, I was in constant pain, & I barely had a bowel movement and it got to the point where I didn’t have any. The rest of my body started to puff up and I looked like a pregnant pillsbury doughboy. Ppl would often ask me when I was due and there was woman on the street who said “you must be having twins!” I would just give a smile and move on. After the head of GI at Johns Hopkins called me a conundrum and seeing other GI specialists in PA, I got an appt at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester.
I found out there that I had vagus nerve damage, gastroparesis, & that my colon had died (and that I had been walking around w/ a dying colon for years) & that I needed a total colectomy.
I was thrilled that they figured out what was wrong and “how to fix it.”
Things aren’t great by any means GI-wise right now BUT it’s a million times better than how I was when I first got to Rochester.
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I don’t know where you live but Dr Parkman at Temple Hospital in Philadelphia specializes in gastroparesis.