A pain that never made sense
Duodenal stasis is a long name for a simple problem. Food gets stuck near the top of the small intestine and cannot move forward.
That stuck food causes bloating, nausea, and vomiting after meals. Over time, people lose weight, feel weak, and start to fear eating.
Most cases come from one of two causes. Either the muscles fail to push food along, or something physically blocks the path.
Why doctors often miss it
One known cause is called superior mesenteric artery syndrome, or SMAS. In SMAS, a major blood vessel presses on the small intestine like a clamp.
Another cause is scarring from old ulcers, which can shrink the intestine into a narrow tunnel. Both are uncommon. Having both at the same time is even rarer.
That mix is what stumped this patient's doctors for decades.
The old way of thinking
For years, doctors usually looked for one cause and treated that. If they found ulcers, they treated ulcers. If they found SMAS, they tried weight gain or feeding tubes to relax the artery's grip.
But here's the twist. When two problems team up, fixing only one leaves the patient just as sick.
That is what kept happening to this man. His treatments helped a little, then the symptoms came roaring back.
A traffic jam with two roadblocks
Think of the small intestine as a one-lane highway. Food is the traffic.
In this patient, scarring from ulcers had built a wall halfway down the road. Just past that wall, the artery above was pressing the road flat, like a heavy boot stepping on a garden hose.
Even if you cleared the wall, the boot was still there. Even if you lifted the boot, the wall remained.
This is why one treatment alone could never fix him.
The team used two tools to see the full picture. A camera scope looked inside the gut and found the ulcer scars. A special CT scan with dye showed the artery squeezing the intestine from the outside.
Once they saw both problems, they chose a keyhole surgery called a laparoscopic gastrojejunostomy with a Braun anastomosis. In plain English, surgeons built a new path that lets food skip past both blockages.
It is like adding a bypass road around a permanently jammed intersection.
The result that stunned the team
After surgery, the man's symptoms vanished. No more vomiting. No more painful bloating after meals.
One year later, he had gained healthy weight and was eating normally. For someone who had suffered for 30 years, that change is hard to put into words.
But there is a catch.
One patient is not proof
This is a single case report. That means doctors are sharing one person's story to help other doctors learn.
It does not prove the surgery will work for everyone with similar problems. It does, however, show what is possible when teams look harder for hidden second causes.
Where this fits in the bigger picture
Many specialists already know about SMAS and ulcer scars on their own. What this case adds is the reminder that the two can stack on top of each other.
When standard treatments fail and symptoms keep returning, doctors may need to look for more than one problem at the same time. Combining a scope with a CT angiogram can reveal what either test alone might miss.
If you or a loved one has had years of unexplained vomiting, bloating, or weight loss after eating, this report is worth knowing about. It does not mean you have SMAS or ulcer scars.
But it does suggest that asking your doctor about advanced imaging, like a CT angiogram, may be reasonable when answers are not coming. Keyhole bypass surgery is already available in many hospitals for people with fixed, scarred blockages.
Honest limits
This story is one patient, treated at one hospital, by one team. There was no comparison group and no long-term tracking beyond a year.
Larger studies are still needed to know how often this double-blockage pattern happens and how well bypass surgery works over many years.
Researchers hope future case series will gather more patients with similar mixed blockages. That data could help build clearer guidelines for when to choose surgery over diet, medicines, or stents.
For now, this case is a valuable nudge to the medical world. When a patient has suffered for decades without answers, the right next step may be looking twice — and looking deeper.