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Psychological Intervention Influences the Outcome of Laparoscopic Antireflux Surgery in Patients with Stress-related Symptoms of Gastroesophageal Reflux Disease

61

Citations

22

References

2001

Year

Abstract

These findings indicate that there is no impact of psychological intervention on objective clinical data. Patients with stress-related GERD symptoms profit significantly from psychological intervention in patient-related factors of surgical outcome such as quality of life or degree of several aspects such as dysphagia and general impairment. Generally, LARS in patients with stress-related GERD symptoms is an effective and safe procedure which improves quality of life with fewer side effects. Psychological intervention reduces non GERD-related GI symptoms and makes the outcome comparable to the outcome of patients without stress-related symptoms. We therefore suggest that surgical treatment alone in patients with stress-related GERD symptoms is incomplete and that psychological intervention can optimize surgical outcome in these patients.

References

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