Top Stories - Posted by Alison Trinidad-USC on Monday, February 25, 2013 12:27 - 6 Comments    
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‘Bracelet’ implant eases chronic heartburn

The LINX device is best for patients with mild to moderate reflux that cannot be adequately controlled by medication or for patients who do not want to take medication to manage the disease, says John Lipham, professor of surgery at USC. (Credit: Alison Trinidad/USC)

USC (US) — A loop of magnetic, titanium beads may help relieve chronic heartburn symptoms that standard treatment cannot, a clinical trial shows.


“These results show that there is another option for the millions of people suffering from chronic reflux,” says John Lipham, associate professor of surgery at the Keck School of Medicine of University of Southern California.

Lipham led clinical investigation of the device as part of his ongoing work to find alternative ways to treat gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD), or chronic heartburn.

Straight from the Source

Read the original study

DOI: 10.1056/NEJMoa1205544

The LINX Reflux Management System is like a bracelet made of magnetic, titanium beads implanted around the end of the esophagus, where the lower esophageal sphincter is located. The lower esophageal sphincter is the valve that prevents reflux; when it weakens, GERD develops.

Implantation of the device is potentially an outpatient procedure that can be completed in 15 to 20 minutes, Lipham says.

Lipham and his colleagues assessed 100 patients with GERD before and after surgery, finding that acid reflux decreased, reflux symptoms improved and the use of medication to manage those symptoms decreased for most patients. Their findings are published in the New England Journal of Medicine.

Severe regurgitation was eliminated in all patients. More than 9 in 10 patients reported satisfaction with their overall condition after having the procedure, compared to 13 percent before treatment while taking medication.

Follow-up studies are still required to assess long-term safety.

Lipham says the LINX device is best for patients with mild to moderate reflux that cannot be adequately controlled by medication or for patients who do not want to take medication to manage the disease.

More than 60 million Americans experience heartburn at least once a month, and some studies have suggested that more than 15 million experience heartburn symptoms every day, according to the American College of Gastroenterology.

Surgical treatment of reflux disease had been limited to a procedure called a Nissen fundoplication, which involves recreating the esophageal sphincter.

While fundoplication is recommended for those with severe reflux, it is a complicated procedure that prevents the ability to belch or vomit and often leads to bloating or gas problems.

The most common adverse events experienced with the LINX included difficulty swallowing, pain when swallowing food, chest pain, nausea, and vomiting.

Patients with LINX will no longer be able to undergo magnetic resonance imaging procedures. The magnetic beads interfere with the machine and can cause the device to be damaged and the patient to be injured.

The Keck Medical Center of USC was one of 14 US and European medical centers to test the device prior to its approval last March by the US Food and Drug Administration. The device is manufactured by Minnesota-based Torax Medical Inc.

Source: USC

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6 Comments

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Kyle M.
Feb 25, 2013 13:47

I hope this works, I will be one of the first in line to get it.

CMMP
Feb 28, 2013 12:22

Kyle, just go see a naturopath. Go get some intense probiotics and enzymes. You may have to slightly alter your diet ie no dairy or fried foods to being ‘cheat’ foods once the other stuff has worked. And if that hasn’t worked for you, then I hope that the implant does.

AEP
Mar 1, 2013 16:54

I agree with CMMP

Gastroman
Mar 2, 2013 17:48

Naturopath? As if they will help. I thought this was a science site. Load of nonsense. Sure, diet is important in gerd management, but the best person to advise on that is a doctor, not a quack.

Anita
Mar 5, 2013 15:20

Naturopath less likely to harm than pharmaceutical based allopathic medicine.
GERD medicines (the class is proton pump inhibitor) can lead to osteoporosis because they hamper calcium metabolism.
Osteoporosis drugs (osteoclasts inhibitors) cause reflux. That’s why instructions state do not take unless you can remain upright for 45 minutes.
Can you see the circle forming here?

No aspirin, NSAIDS, alcohol, dairy, fried foods, a lot easier than the pharmaceutical trial to c. difficile infections, brittle bones, acid rebound (homeostasis at work — look it up) and headaches that proton pump inhibitors list as side effects.

Choice Chemist Staff
May 8, 2013 9:31

@kyle me too
@CMMP just wanted to know what is Naturopath or any of the others if they could explain?

Thanks,
Choice Chemist Staff

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