Incisionless Surgery is Investigational Treatment for Esophageal Disorder

A new investigational treatment called PerOral Endoscopic Myotomy is being used to treat achalasia, a condition where the esophagus is unable to move food into the stomach, according to a Northwestern Memorial Hospital news release.

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Surgeons at Northwestern Memorial Hospital in Chicago are performing the procedure in a clinical trial. Without this new approach, treating esophageal achalasia surgically involves making at least five incisions in a patient’s abdomen.

 

The new treatment involves pushing an endoscope through the mouth and down the esophagus, then cutting abnormal muscle fibers that prevent the valve at the base of the esophagus from opening.

 

Related Articles on the Esophagus:

3 Breakthroughs in GI Endoscopy

Radiofrequency Ablation Successful for Barrett’s Esophagus

Study Finds Better Method for Performing Standard Upper Endoscopy


 

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