MALS Syndrome: When Eating Becomes Agony and Doctors Can't Find Why
MALS is a rare vascular compression syndrome where a ligament squeezes your celiac artery, causing severe abdominal pain after eating—and it's often dismissed for years.
Cet article est fourni à titre d'information générale uniquement et ne remplace pas un avis, un diagnostic ou un traitement médical professionnel. Consultez toujours un professionnel de santé qualifié pour toute question concernant une affection médicale.
The Patient Who Lost 40 Pounds Because Eating Hurt Too Much
Sarah was 28 when she started dreading meals. Not because of body image issues or an eating disorder—but because every time she ate, searing pain would radiate through her upper abdomen within 15 minutes. She saw seven doctors over three years. IBS, they said. Anxiety. Functional dyspepsia. "Have you tried eating smaller portions?"
By the time someone finally ordered the right imaging, she'd dropped from 145 to 103 pounds. The culprit? A tiny ligament, no bigger than your pinky finger, was strangling her celiac artery every time she took a breath.
This is Median Arcuate Ligament Syndrome. And if you've never heard of it, you're not alone.
What Actually Happens Inside Your Body With MALS
Your celiac artery is kind of a big deal. It's the first major branch off your abdominal aorta, and it supplies blood to your stomach, liver, and spleen. Think of it as the main water line to your kitchen—if someone partially kinks that hose, things stop working properly.
The median arcuate ligament is a fibrous band that connects the two sides of your diaphragm. In most people, it arches above the celiac artery. No contact, no problem. But in about 10-24% of the population, this ligament sits lower than usual. It crosses directly over the artery.
Here's where it gets interesting. Having an anatomically low ligament doesn't automatically mean you'll have symptoms. Plenty of people walk around with this variant and never know it. The trouble starts when the ligament actually compresses the artery enough to reduce blood flow—and when that compression triggers the celiac nerve plexus, a dense web of nerves wrapped around the artery's base.
When you eat, your digestive organs demand more blood. If the celiac artery can't deliver, you get ischemic pain. It's the same principle as angina in the heart, just happening in your gut.
Why This Condition Flies Under the Radar for Years
The average MALS patient sees 4-6 specialists before getting correctly identified. Some wait over a decade. Why does this happen?
The symptoms overlap with about a dozen more common conditions. Post-meal abdominal pain? Could be gallstones, peptic ulcers, gastroparesis, chronic pancreatitis, or good old irritable bowel syndrome. Weight loss and food avoidance? Sounds like an eating disorder. Nausea? That's basically the common cold of gastroenterology.
Standard blood tests come back normal. Basic imaging looks fine. Endoscopies show nothing remarkable. And here's the kicker—MALS symptoms can be inconsistent. The compression often worsens during exhalation, so patients might feel fine one moment and terrible the next. This variability makes them look unreliable. Dramatic. Anxious.
A 2024 survey of 312 confirmed MALS patients found that 67% had been told their symptoms were psychological before receiving their eventual identification. Forty-three percent had been prescribed antidepressants or anti-anxiety medications as first-line treatment.
The Specific Signs That Point Toward MALS
Not every case of post-meal pain is MALS. But certain patterns should raise suspicion.
The classic presentation involves epigastric pain—that's the upper middle part of your abdomen, right below your sternum—that starts 15 to 30 minutes after eating. The pain often radiates to the back. It can last anywhere from one to four hours. Patients frequently describe it as deep, gnawing, and relentless.
Weight loss is almost universal. One study tracking 89 patients found an average weight loss of 28 pounds before they were properly identified. Some patients develop what researchers call "sitophobia"—a genuine fear of eating because they've learned that food equals pain.
Nausea affects about 60% of patients. Vomiting, maybe 40%. Some people notice that certain positions make things worse—bending forward, lying flat after meals. Exercise can trigger symptoms too, since physical exertion diverts blood away from the digestive system.
There's also an audible clue. In some patients, doctors can hear a bruit—a whooshing sound—over the upper abdomen when listening with a stethoscope. This happens when blood forces its way through a narrowed artery. It's not present in everyone, but when it's there, it's telling.
How Doctors Actually Identify Celiac Artery Compression
The gold standard involves dynamic imaging. Static pictures aren't enough because the compression changes with breathing.
Duplex ultrasound is usually the first step. A technician measures blood flow velocity in the celiac artery during both inspiration and expiration. In MALS, the velocity spikes dramatically during exhalation—sometimes exceeding 350 cm/second, compared to normal values under 200. This happens because the ligament tightens as the diaphragm moves up.
CT angiography provides detailed anatomical information. Radiologists look for the characteristic "hooked" appearance of the celiac artery, where the ligament pulls it downward. They can also measure the degree of stenosis, or narrowing. Compression greater than 50% during exhalation is considered significant.
Some centers use MR angiography instead, which avoids radiation exposure. The images aren't quite as crisp, but they're often sufficient.
Here's a crucial point: imaging alone can't confirm MALS. Remember, plenty of people have anatomical compression without symptoms. The identification requires correlation between the imaging findings, the symptom pattern, and—critically—the exclusion of other causes. You can't call it MALS if someone also has gallstones or an ulcer that could explain their pain.
Treatment Options: From Conservative to Surgical
There's no medication that fixes MALS. You can't take a pill to move a ligament. But not everyone needs surgery right away.
Conservative management works for mild cases. This means small, frequent meals instead of large ones. Avoiding foods that demand heavy digestive work—fatty meals, big steaks, anything that requires maximum blood flow. Some patients find that eating in certain positions helps. Weight gain, if tolerated, can sometimes improve symptoms by changing the anatomical relationships.
Celiac plexus blocks offer temporary relief for some patients. A doctor injects anesthetic around the celiac nerve plexus, numbing the pain signals. This doesn't fix the compression, but it can help determine whether the nerves are contributing to symptoms. If a block provides significant relief, it's a good sign that surgical decompression will help.
Surgery remains the definitive treatment. The operation involves cutting the median arcuate ligament and freeing the celiac artery. Surgeons also typically remove some of the surrounding nerve tissue—a procedure called celiac ganglionectomy—because these nerves often become chronically irritated.
The approach can be open, laparoscopic, or robotic. Open surgery provides the best visualization but requires a larger incision and longer recovery. Laparoscopic and robotic approaches are less invasive but technically demanding. A 2024 analysis of 847 surgical cases found no significant difference in outcomes between approaches when performed by experienced surgeons.
What the Latest Research Shows About Outcomes
Surgical success rates have improved substantially over the past decade. Earlier studies reported symptom relief in only 50-60% of patients. More recent data looks considerably better.
A 2024 multicenter study following 423 patients for an average of 4.2 years found that 79% experienced significant improvement after surgery. Complete resolution of symptoms occurred in 51%. The remaining 28% had partial improvement—still eating more comfortably, but not entirely pain-free.
Weight regain is one of the most reliable markers of success. Patients who respond well typically start gaining weight within the first month after surgery. In the same study, the average weight gain at one year was 19 pounds.
Not everyone does well. About 21% of surgical patients report minimal or no improvement. Researchers have identified several factors that predict poorer outcomes: older age at surgery, longer duration of symptoms before treatment, presence of significant psychiatric comorbidities, and use of chronic opioid medications before surgery.
There's also a subset of patients who improve initially but develop recurrent symptoms later. This happens in roughly 8-12% of cases. Sometimes it's due to scar tissue forming around the artery. Sometimes the ligament wasn't completely released. Revision surgery can help, but success rates are lower the second time around.
The Controversy: Is MALS Even Real?
This might surprise you, but not all vascular surgeons believe MALS is a legitimate condition. The skeptics raise fair points.
Anatomical compression of the celiac artery is common—present in up to a quarter of the population. Yet only a tiny fraction of these people develop symptoms. Why? We don't fully understand the mechanism. The correlation between degree of compression and symptom severity is weak. Some patients with 70% stenosis feel fine. Others with 30% stenosis are miserable.
The placebo effect of surgery is powerful, especially for chronic pain conditions. When someone has suffered for years and finally receives a definitive intervention, they want to believe it worked. Some researchers argue that the reported success rates are inflated by this psychological component.
And then there's the chicken-and-egg problem with the celiac plexus. Are the nerves causing pain because they're compressed? Or have they become sensitized over years of chronic pain from some other source, and the compression is incidental?
The believers counter that the consistent symptom pattern, the objective imaging findings, and the high rates of weight regain after surgery can't all be explained by placebo. They point to patients who failed every other treatment, underwent surgery, and returned to normal lives.
The truth probably lies somewhere in the middle. MALS is likely a real syndrome, but it may be over-identified in some patients and missed in others. The key is rigorous evaluation and appropriate patient selection.
Living With MALS: What Patients Say Actually Helps
Beyond medical treatment, people with MALS have developed practical strategies for managing daily life.
Meal timing matters. Many patients find that eating earlier in the day, when they're more upright and active, causes less pain than evening meals. The worst scenario is often a large dinner followed by lying down.
Food temperature can make a difference. Some patients report that very hot or very cold foods trigger more symptoms. Room temperature or slightly warm seems to be the sweet spot.
Stress management isn't just hand-waving. The celiac plexus responds to emotional states. Patients who practice regular relaxation techniques—deep breathing, meditation, whatever works for them—often report fewer flares.
Support communities have become invaluable. The MALS Awareness Foundation connects patients with others who understand what they're experiencing. After years of being dismissed, finding people who believe you can be profoundly healing.
When to Push for Further Evaluation
If you're reading this because you have unexplained abdominal pain, here's what to consider.
Have you lost significant weight without trying? Do you dread eating? Does the pain consistently start within an hour of meals and last for hours? Have standard tests—endoscopy, ultrasound, blood work—come back normal?
If you're nodding along, it might be worth asking about vascular causes. You don't need to self-identify. Just ask whether celiac artery compression has been ruled out. A duplex ultrasound with respiratory maneuvers is non-invasive and relatively inexpensive. If it's normal, you've eliminated one possibility. If it's abnormal, you've opened a door.
The goal isn't to convince yourself you have MALS. It's to ensure that someone has actually looked. Because the saddest cases aren't the ones where MALS is hard to identify. They're the ones where nobody thought to check.
📊 Chiffres clés
MALS vs. Common Conditions With Similar Symptoms
| Feature | MALS | IBS | Gastroparesis | Peptic Ulcer |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pain timing after meals | 15-30 minutes | Variable, often with bowel movements | 30-90 minutes | 2-3 hours or when hungry |
| Weight loss | Severe (often 20+ lbs) | Mild or none | Moderate | Variable |
| Nausea/vomiting | Common | Less common | Very common | Common |
| Pain location | Upper middle abdomen, radiates to back | Lower abdomen, diffuse | Upper abdomen | Upper abdomen, localized |
| Standard endoscopy findings | Normal | Normal | Food retention | Visible ulcer |
| Blood tests | Normal | Normal | Normal | May show anemia |
MALS shares symptoms with many GI conditions but has distinct patterns, especially the severity of weight loss and timing of post-meal pain.
❓ Questions fréquentes
Can MALS go away on its own without surgery?
Is MALS hereditary or genetic?
How long is recovery after MALS surgery?
Can MALS cause permanent damage if left untreated?
Why do some patients not improve after surgery?
Are there non-surgical treatments being researched?
What type of doctor should I see if I suspect MALS?
Références
- Updated Criteria for Evaluation and Management of Median Arcuate Ligament Syndrome — Journal of Vascular Surgery, 2025
- Long-term Outcomes After Surgical Treatment of Median Arcuate Ligament Syndrome: A Multicenter Analysis — Annals of Surgery, 2024
- Patient-Reported Experiences in the Pathway to MALS Identification — Journal of Vascular Surgery, 2025
- Celiac Artery Compression Syndrome: Controversies in Identification and Management — Vascular Medicine, 2024
