Dump Syndrome Correction
Dumping syndrome manifests as heart socket discomfort, palpitations, fatigue, sweating, dizziness, nausea, vomiting and even collapse shortly after eating (especially sweets), and symptoms such as bowel sounds and diarrhea. It is generally believed that the pyloric sphincter is lost after gastric surgery, and food is expelled into the upper jejunum too quickly, and it is hypertonic without mixed dilution of gastrointestinal fluid. A large amount of extracellular fluid is sucked into the intestinal cavity, resulting in sudden blood circulation The decrease is also related to the sudden expansion of the intestinal cavity, the release of serotonin, the intestinal peristalsis and the stimulation of the abdominal plexus. This disease should be distinguished from hypoglycemia syndrome that occurs 2 to 4 hours after eating. The treatment of dumping syndrome is in principle a symptomatic treatment. Eat less and eat more foods, avoid sweet, hot fluids, and lie supine for 10 to 20 minutes after a meal. In most patients, symptoms can be gradually controlled and cured. Very few severe patients who have not improved after more than one year of treatment should be corrected by surgery. The principle of surgery is to change the original Biro I operation to the stomach and duodenum jejunum; to the original Biro II operation to the Biro I operation. For young and middle-aged patients, those with high stomach acid should also perform vagus nerve resection.
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