The Hess Method

DSRIGGS

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I was poking around this morning to see what I could find documented about the Hess method that we hear about so often anecdotally. I came across this page:

http://www.duodenalswitch.com/1998hess.html#9

The "Measurement and Size" section is particularly interesting to me:



MEASUREMENTS and SIZE

After resection of the greater curvature we would prefer to have the volume of the stomach to be somewhere around 150 cc (generally, no less than 100 cc or more than 175cc). We size the stomach with a #40 dilator along the lesser curvature and we stay 1 1/2 to 2 finger breaths away from the dilator towards the greater curvature side when we apply the ILA-100 stapler. In general, this will give us a stomach that will fall in that range. The serosa to serosa suture reduces the size of the stomach which is a factor in early weight loss as time passes this stomach volume will enlarge.



We believe that the total length of the alimentary limb (from the cecum to the stomach) should be approximately 40% of the total length and that the common channel (the distal portion of the alimentary limb just beyond the anastomosis of the biliary limb ) should be somewhere around 10% of the total small bowel length. We make the common channel 50 cm, 75 cm or 100 cm, whichever seems the most proper. The length of our alimentary limb is always calculated in 25cm increments: 250 cm, 275cm, 300 cm, etc. Table 3 illustrates the common channel, the alimentary limb and approximately the number of cases we used in that group. Also, it indicates the average length of the bowel, patient's weight, and stomach volume, and this illustrates that in general, the measurements are close to 40% alimentary canal and 10% common channel. These are only guidelines and we evaluate every patient individually at the time of surgery as to their age, their weight, and to the number of co-morbidities in making our decision on the above sizes. The proper volume of the stomach, and the lengths of the roux-en-y limbs and bilio limbs have been debated. Table 3 is of the first 382 cases of primary BPD with a duodenal switch and it gives an impression of the variety of measurements in lengths with similar bowel lengths in percentages. We believe that the percentage should be considered when deciding how long the limbs should be, then as long as consistency is maintained, the method of measurement is insignificant.
M3 (and by personal contact ) in Chicago by Dr. Scopinaro indicated that by increasing the length of the alimentary limb the absorption of protein increases substantially, whereas increasing the size of the common channel alone does not necessarily increase the amount of protein absorption, but it does reduce fat malabsorption. It is his feeling that most of the digestive juices and bile are reabsorbed before they reach the common channel and that an increase in the alimentary canal would be a method of increasing protein absorption without reducing the selective malabsorption of fat and weight loss capabilities. However, as you increase the length of the alimentary limb you also increase the absorption of carbohydrates. We feel that this is probably correct and in general it supports our method of using 40% for the guideline of the length of the alimentary canal. It appears that the alimentary canal can be made longer, the common channel made relatively short, and a selective malabsorption of fat will occur while maintaining adequate absorption of protein.


I couldn't get the tables to copy in properly but there is good data on channel lengths, min, max and mean total small bowel length and the different combinations employed.
 
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I had the Hess method....by Hess himself. At one point he was thinking about revising as I started going down the malnurishment tube. So even that method is not foolproof. As for me, I made a comeback without a revision.
 
I had the Hess method....by Hess himself. At one point he was thinking about revising as I started going down the malnurishment tube. So even that method is not foolproof. As for me, I made a comeback without a revision.
Cool. You had your DS with the legend. I think Dr K trained under him but not 100% sure.

Without a doubt even following the Hess is not fool proof because other things can come into play, but it does give the the best chance for success because the variables to this surgery that can be controlled are when the Hess methodology is employed.

I will find the study that Dr K did when I get home and post it. There were nearly 400 people in the study and I don't think any of them had any nutritional deficiencies, which was the point of the study.

And I want people to understand that I am not saying that a cookie cutter can't be and isn't successful for many. My point is that it puts people at unnecessary risk by not knowing all factors to make a decision on optimal channel lengths. I see no reason for not doing the Hess when data shows it works.

I know that I am at the tail end of the cookie cutter normal distribution on the lose too much side, and that there are others in the tail of the distribution of the inadequate /less than desired weight loss side of that curve. There are great many who fall in the middle who are just fine.
 
Here is the Dr K Study I referenced in my previous post. 373 patients who received percentage based bypass of small intestine (Hess Method) and none of them had to be revised. The two-year post op values for Albumin and Total Protein were 4.0 and 6.9 respectively. 7 patients required short term pancreatic enzyme (CREON) to stabilize weight, albumin and total protein, but all came off and were fine.

http://www.dssurgery.com/about/publications/albumin-abstract.pdf
 
I will find the study that Dr K did when I get home and post it. There were nearly 400 people in the study and I don't think any of them had any nutritional deficiencies, which was the point of the study.
Just so I understand...I am assuming that these people did take nutritional supplementation after surgery.
 
Just so I understand...I am assuming that these people did take nutritional supplementation after surgery.
I am not sure I fully understand the question, but I will attempt to answer what I think you are asking. The study I linked showed a few (6 I think) had to temporarily take a pancreatic enzyme to help nutrition, but the other 370 or so were just normal DS patients who were presumably compliant. None required a revision.
 
I have one more comment about Dr. Hess. Great surgeon that he was, at the end, he was behind the times in his recommendations for supplements. He really didn't advocate getting vitamin levels checked. I don't think copper and zinc were even a consideration. When I started to go "down" nutritionally, he wanted to do a revision. What I really needed was TPN (30 days) and a complete overhaul of my supplementation schedule (thank you VitaLady). My point is, no matter who your surgeon or MD is, you have to take charge of your health. Take it from me, it is better to do this while you are feeling well and thinking clearly as opposed to being in a mental fog in a hospital bed.
 
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First off let me say a huge thank you to the ladies for putting this board together and for all of you vets that were at Proboards and now this fantastic site. Those of us who had the DS in the last 3-5 years are so lucky to have found this group and we all know so much more now than we did back in the day because of those of you who pioneered the way.

The learning isn't only on the patient side of the equation either. The Dr K's of the world who take and active role in helping patients live with the DS, have learned a lot over the years as well from their personal experience with treating their patients, and from these communities. Word does filter back to these guys WHO WANT TO KNOW (those who don't stay in oblivion and run their own kingdoms).

Regarding taking charge of your own health, that is spot on. That is exactly what I have done and had I not, I would probably be dead. I had to push to get on CREON because I was so badly malnourished. My surgeon did an emergency blockage removal/hernia repair and the dumbasses, even though my labs were available, told me to increase my iron (to their credit they did catch zinc and copper were low as well) because I was anemic. They didn't even check the labs to see my iron pane was very strong and that my total protein and albumin were very low. I was iron deficient anemic from malnutrition. Only after nearly passing out several times and two trips to the ER which ended up in a 6 day stay in the hospital did they finally figure out that I was severely malnourished and that was the reason that my HR was 35-40 resting and BP was 75/40. The surgical team didn't see me in hospital it was an internist and I suggested to him that I needed creon because my nutrition was so poor. I wanted TPN to boost me but the GI Dr who ended up being the one prescribing the proper dosing of CREON I neeeded, is conservative as hell and wouldn't do it. Over the next year I got my nutrition up with the CREON but it made me miserable and I wasn't living life that way, so I started talking to Dr K about a revision. He suggested that we wait until the 2 year mark and then reevaluate. Well about 2-3 months from the 2 year mark I lost 17 pounds in a week. My surgeon here in Peoria saw me two different times (once before the sudden drop) and then after, and both times said "your labs are great....you could be the poster boy for the DS.... come see me in 30 days". To which I said, are you crazy? I am on 400,000 freaking IU's a day to barely be at the bottom of range. After that I called Dr K and told him about the rapid weight loss and he told me that you need to do one of two things and possibly both. You need the revision now or you need to go on TPN to get your strength up and the we will do the revision. 2 weeks later I had my revision, after he did labs (my weight loss had stabilized) and he boosted me with a D injection.

Long story short is that we are our number one advocates and even the best surgeons sometimes aren't good at nutritional/supplementation advice (Dr K is great at both surgery and nutritional/supplemental advice). As you say we must advocate for ourselves.

One thing I want to point out about your story. TPN seems to have gotten you over the hump and allowed time for you new system to work. Obviously I don't know the specifics or your case, but that worked for you without revision because your channels were the proper length. Unfortunately you weren't getting good advice from your Dr on supplementation but once you fixed that you were okay. That wouldn't have worked for me because even though I was properly supplementing and eating right, I simply didn't have enough square inches of small bowel absorbing because my channels were too short.
 
DSRIGGS thank you for sharing your story. You are an excellent example of self health advocacy. It's a comfort to me to know there is a "Dr K" in this world who gets it, and can help you when you get in trouble. That is a resource I'm hanging on to. I can't tell you how frightened I was, knowing I was in serious trouble, trying to figure out the problem and then educating all the "specialists" that surrounded me. I took quite dramatic steps to demand TPN and then hospitalization. My will to survive was strong, but it was so hard both mentally and physically. I personally felt a divine intervention. I really cannot account for my request for a stool culture, which revealed food poisoning (the event that tipped me). I also requested zinc and copper levels, which they grudgingly ordered. When those levels came back so low they barely registered, then they started to think along the lines of malnurishment. It was a long journey back, and I'm grateful for life and I still do not regret this surgery.
 
DSRIGGS thank you for sharing your story. You are an excellent example of self health advocacy. It's a comfort to me to know there is a "Dr K" in this world who gets it, and can help you when you get in trouble. That is a resource I'm hanging on to. I can't tell you how frightened I was, knowing I was in serious trouble, trying to figure out the problem and then educating all the "specialists" that surrounded me. I took quite dramatic steps to demand TPN and then hospitalization. My will to survive was strong, but it was so hard both mentally and physically. I personally felt a divine intervention. I really cannot account for my request for a stool culture, which revealed food poisoning (the event that tipped me). I also requested zinc and copper levels, which they grudgingly ordered. When those levels came back so low they barely registered, then they started to think along the lines of malnurishment. It was a long journey back, and I'm grateful for life and I still do not regret this surgery.
@Razbry Thanks Hon. That is an amazing story and I so relate to how tiring it is, but you are obviously a strong lady who advocated for what she knew was needed.

I too do not regret my decision to have the DS, not one bit. I wish it was done properly the first time but I am pretty confident that I am on the mend and things are coming into an equilibrium where I am going to be healthy. My weight and energy levels the last few weeks have been ticking up and gut discomfort has been much better. I feel like the section of non absorbing SB that was anastomosed to be absorbing SB is staring to hypertrophy and the absorption is improving. Going from 400,000 IU of CREON daily to nothing immediately after surgery and staying where I have been (slightly low) is a huge improvement. I would be in intensive care if I hadn't had the revision and wasn't taking a boat load of CREON so that alone is a huge step and now as the bowel is starting to absorb more that next level is going to be gradual but hopefully improves significantly in the coming months.
 
Scott...I'm so happy for you. Keep going! :) I'm enclosing a copy of my "card" that Dr. Hess gave his patients. It is so sweet and simple, and not all that long ago (2002). As you can see, I was his 1477th DS. I believe he retired around 2007.
 

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Scott...I'm so happy for you. Keep going! :) I'm enclosing a copy of my "card" that Dr. Hess gave his patients. It is so sweet and simple, and not all that long ago (2002). As you can see, I was his 1477th DS. I believe he retired around 2007.
so cool
 

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