# Laparoscopic Hiatal Repair and Gastropexy without Fundoplication of Hiatal Hernia in Elderly Patients with High Dysphagia Score: A Case Series of Four Patients

**Authors:** Shinya Urakawa, Daishi Yoshimura, Kazuya Sakata, Kimimasa Ikeda, Satoru Miyazaki

PMC · DOI: 10.70352/scrj.cr.25-0235 · 2025-06-12

## TL;DR

This case series shows that a specific surgery for hiatal hernia can reduce swallowing issues in elderly patients without a common additional procedure.

## Contribution

The study demonstrates the feasibility of hiatal repair without fundoplication in elderly patients with severe dysphagia.

## Key findings

- Laparoscopic hiatal repair and gastropexy without fundoplication significantly reduced dysphagia scores in elderly patients.
- One patient experienced hernia recurrence but remained asymptomatic on medication.
- Surgical outcomes were comparable to conventional fundoplication despite higher patient age and comorbidities.

## Abstract

Hiatal repair with fundoplication for hiatal hernia (HH) could cause postoperative dysphagia. In the aging society, the number of patients with HH type III/IV and severe dysphagia is increasing. In this case, the surgical priority is to resolve the dysphagia. Recent papers have reported that laparoscopic hiatal repair without fundoplication can be an alternative procedure. Nevertheless, the indication for hiatal repair without fundoplication should be carefully considered.

We performed laparoscopic hiatal repair and gastropexy without fundoplication in four patients with HH type III and high dysphagia scores. The median age was 84 (range 81–96) years, and the median values in the updated Charlson Comorbidity Index (uCCI) were 2 (2–5). Dysphagia scores were high (3, n = 2 and 4, n = 2). The media operative time was 196 (57–249) minutes, and the postoperative hospital stay was 9.5 (8–12) days. Only one case experienced HH recurrence (Type I) on endoscopy and computed tomography but did not have heartburn or dysphagia while on medication. The FSSG scores significantly decreased from 29 (26–35) to 4 (0–7) after surgery (p = 0.0035). Compared with those of four patients who underwent conventional surgeries (hiatal repair with Nissen fundoplication) during the same period, patients undergoing hiatal repair and gastropexy without fundoplication were relatively older (84 [81–96] vs. 74.5 [72–79]), had higher uCCI values (2 [2–5] vs. 1 [0–2]), and higher dysphagia scores (3.5 [3–4] vs. 1 [0–1]). However, there were no differences in the surgical outcomes and postoperative FSSG scores.

Laparoscopic hiatal repair and gastropexy without fundoplication is feasible in elderly patients with HH type III and high dysphagia scores.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** hiatal hernia (MONDO:0007721)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** heartburn (MESH:D006356), HH (MESH:D006551), Dysphagia (MESH:D003680)
- **Chemicals:** Nissen (-)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

2 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12169754/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12169754