A 20-year prospective follow-up of childhood hiatal hernia
- 1 June 1977
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in The British Journal of Radiology
- Vol. 50 (594) , 400-403
- https://doi.org/10.1259/0007-1285-50-594-400
Abstract
A long-term prospective follow-up of 113 children with vomiting due to a small hiatal hernia is described. When reviewed by the same clinical and radiological observers 20 or more years later, over 90% of unoperated non-stricture patients were asymptomatic whereas only 44% of the stricture and/or surgically treated group were without symptoms. Half or possibly more of the asymptomatic patients still had a hernia and it is possible that these may suffer a recurrence of symptoms later in adult life. The loculus of thoracic stomach tended to retain the same shape; there was a slightly better prognosis for the locular type of hernia compared with the tubular type. Complicating esophageal strictures can decrease or disappear without surgery other than dilatation; the results of treatment by radical surgery were disappointing. There is need for an even more prolonged follow-up into later adult life.This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Fate of the Partial Thoracic Stomach (`Hiatus Hernia') in ChildrenArchives of Disease in Childhood, 1960
- The Natural History of the Partial Thoracic Stomach (Hiatus Hernia) in ChildrenArchives of Disease in Childhood, 1959
- Gastro-Oesophageal Incompetence in ChildrenRadiology, 1954
- MINOR DEGREES OF PARTIAL THORACIC STOMACH IN CHILDHOOD: REVIEW OF 112 CASESThe Lancet, 1952