The effect of vagotomy on the lower oesophageal sphincter: A manometric study

Abstract
The pressure profile of the gastro-oesophageal junctional zone was studied at rest and during abdominal compression in 26 duodenal ulcer patients after subdiaphragmatic truncal vagotomy with a drainage procedure. An ‘early’ group of 9 patients was investigated 10–14 days after surgery and a ‘late’ group of 17 patients more than 1 year after operation. Comparisons were made with 25 control subjects. The resting lower oesophageal sphincter pressures after vagotomy in both the early and late groups were similar to the levels of sphincter pressure in the controls. However, the increase in sphincter pressure always observed during abdominal compression in normal subjects was significantly decreased by complete vagotomy, and the normal increase in the gastrosphincteric pressure gradient was not produced. All 26 patients were tested for completeness of vagotomy using the insulin/pentagastrin test. In 19 patients the vagotomy was complete and in 7 patients it was judged to be incomplete. A decrease in the gastro-sphincteric pressure gradient on manometric study of the lower oesophageal sphincter was interpreted as indicating complete vagotomy. Accurate correlation between secretory response and compression response was achieved in all patients with complete vagotomy and in 5 of the 7 patients with incomplete vagotomy.