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Query: UMLS:C0008031 (
chest pain
)
17,248
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Gastroesophageal reflux is frequently found in patients with
chest pain
despite normal coronary anatomy, but little data on the effect of specific medication exist. After performing 24 h ambulatory pH monitoring and the Bernstein test on 23 patients with normal coronary anatomy, we gave omeprazole, 40 mg nocte, for six weeks to these and to a control group of ten patients with coronary disease. Pain episodes per fortnight fell from 16.2 to 12.0 (P=0.02) in the patients with normal anatomy and from 19.6 to 17.1 (nonsignificant) in the patients with coronary disease. Improvement occurred in seven (30%) of the patients with normal coronary anatomy compared with one (10%) of those with coronary disease, while complete resolution occurred in four (17%) and none, respectively. Improvement or complete resolution were not predicted by the results of 24 h pH monitoring, although there was a trend towards the prediction of efficacy by the Bernstein test.
Omeprazole
shows promise as a treatment for patients with
chest pain
despite normal coronary anatomy and larger placebo-controlled trials should now be undertaken.
...
PMID:Effect of omeprazole in patients with chest pain and normal coronary anatomy: initial experience. 969 31
We studied spontaneous gastroesophageal reflux (GER)-induced esophageal distension using ultrasound imaging and its role in the genesis of esophageal symptoms before and during esomeprazole therapy. Ten controls and 10 GER disease (GERD) patients were studied by combined impedance, esophageal pH, manometry, and ultrasonography before and during esomeprazole therapy. Physiological data and symptoms were recorded for 2 h following a standardized meal. From ultrasound images, the esophageal cross-sectional area (CSA) at the peak of GER-induced distension was determined and compared between controls vs. patients, symptomatic vs. asymptomatic GER episodes, and before vs. during esomeprazole in GERD patients. The mean lumen CSA is greater in the patients than controls (271 +/- 71 mm(2) vs. 163 +/- 56 mm(2), P = 0.001) but not different among asymptomatic reflux episodes, and those associated with regurgitation (290 +/- 110 mm(2)) or heartburn (271 +/- 67 mm(2)). Eight
chest pain
episodes associated with reflux revealed a tendency toward larger mean esophageal distension (459 +/- 40 mm(2)) compared with asymptomatic reflux (268 +/- 70 mm(2), P = 0.058). Following esomeprazole treatment, most GER episodes were nonacidic and asymptomatic except in two patients in whom cyclical reflux was associated with large esophageal distensions.
Esomeprazole
did not alter the lumen CSA during GER. Esophageal distension is greater in the GERD subjects compared with controls; however, it is unlikely that the GER-induced distension of the esophagus plays a significant role in the genesis of heartburn sensation.
Esomeprazole
therapy does not alter the GER-induced distension of the esophagus.
...
PMID:Distension during gastroesophageal reflux: effects of acid inhibition and correlation with symptoms. 1755 89