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Query: UMLS:C0011168 (dysphagia)
15,644 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Twenty-nine patients who underwent Nissen fundoplication for the treatment of symptomatic, sliding, esophageal hiatal hernia are reported. Fourteen of these patients also underwent parietal cell vagotomy (PCV) without a drainage procedure. Simulatenous cineradiography and manometric studies, esophagoscopy and gastric analysis were performed pre- and postoperatively. Esophageal acid clearing and pH reflux studies were performed postoperatively. All but 3 patients had reflux and/or esophagitis preoperatively. Cineradiography and the pH reflux test were the most reliable tests for diagnosis of reflux. There was no operative mortality. The mean followup period was 20 months. Dysphagia occurred in 5 patients. Correction of dysphagia in one patient required operation. The dysphagia in the remaining patients was temporary and mild, responding to dilatation. Two patients had mild diarrhea. One patient who had had a previous gastric resection developed severe diarrhea after bilateral truncal vagotomy. No patient developed the "bloat syndrome". A close correlation did not exist between reflux and preoperative sphincter pressure. The mean LES pressure increased 10 mmH2O postoperatively and the two patients with persistent reflux postoperatively had normal LES pressure. Correction of reflux after Nissen fundoplication is probably due to some mechanism other than increased LES pressure. Recurrent or persistent hiatal hernia was diagnosed in 4 patients by cineradiography. Two of these patients had reflux but only the patient who had undergone PCV was without symptoms or esophagitis. The technical performance of the Nissen hiatal hernia repair was greatly facilitat ed by PCV. This procedure also provided adequate treatment for patients with concomitant duodenal ulcer disease. PCV, unaccompanied by a drainage procedure, was not associated with increased morbidity, mortality or the adverse effects usually attributed to vagotomy. In the event of recurrent hernia and reflux, PCV may prevent the development of esophagitis.
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PMID:Evaluation of the Nissen fundoplication for treatment of hiatal hernia: use of parietal cell vagotomy without drainage as an adjunctive procedure. 23 37

Postvagotomy dysphagia (PVD) has been attributed to either periesophageal obstruction or failure of the lower esophageal sphincter (LES) to relax, presumably from interruption of preganglionic, contraction-inhibiting vagal fibers--a postvagotomy achalasia (PVA). This report describes a patient with periesophageal fibrosis which was successfully treated with dilation, and a second patient with an achalasia-like pattern on esophageal manometry after unilateral high, transthoracic vagotomy. The second patient is the first manometrically documented example of achalasia in a human subject related to proximal vagotomy. Most, if not all, PVD is due to esophageal obstruction and PVA is rare.
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PMID:Mechanical and neurogenic factors in postvagotomoy dysphagia. 26 49

Three males with similar malformations including hypertelorism, telecanthus, cleft lip and palate, and hypospadias, have been evaluated. One also had a laryngotracheoesophageal cleft and therefore was considered to have the G syndrome. The other two had no stridor, aspiration, or difficulty swallowing, and were considered to have the BBB syndrome. Both disorders are associated with multiple malformations and can be most readily distinguished by the presence of laryngoesophageal abnormalities in the G syndrome and differences in facial features evident later in childhood. The BBB syndrome appears to be inherited as an X-linked disorder with the affected female showing only telecanthus and hypertelorism. The G syndrome exhibits autosomal dominant inheritance with males more severely affected, although a few few females have had serious malformations in addition to telecanthus and hypertelorism. In the family with the G syndrome evaluated for this report, the mother of the affected infant had telecanthus, hypertelorism, and anosmia, the latter a feature not previously noted in this disorder.
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PMID:Phenotypic overlap of the BBB and G syndromes. 26 34

A diagnosis of herpetic esophagitis was made in a patient with alcoholic liver disease by means of endoscopy and brush cytology. Herpetic esophagitis is a common cause of esophageal ulceration in severely debilitated or immunosuppressed patients especially when the esophagus is traumatized by nasogastric intubation. Dysphagia or odynophagia may occur in some but not all patients. Radiographic picture may resemble Candida esophagitis. Endoscopy, biopsy, cytology, culture and serological studies will help in making a diagnosis. Specific antiviral agents may be used for treatment but spontaneous resolution without any sequelae was documented in our patient.
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PMID:Cytologic diagnosis of herpetic esophagitis. A case report. 26 40

Achaiasia cardia is the commonest benign obstructive lesion of the oesophagus in India. We have reviewed 100 cases over a 20-year period. This is the largest series that has been reported from India. Some unusual features were observed. Males were more often affected than females in a ratio of 2.3:1. Children below the age of 10 years are not often affected, but we had 10 subjects in this age group. In our series dysphagia for solids has been the main presenting feature. Barium swallow X-ray studies of the oesophagus were diagnostic. The treatment of choice had been surgical, and a modified Heller's operation has been the chosen procedure. Our preference is for the thoracic approach. Postoperative complications were few. Long-term follow-up of 65 patients over a 19-year period revealed excellent results in 50 patients (76.9%), good results in 10 (15.4%), and fair and poor results in two (3.1%) and three (4.6%) patients respectively. The fair and poor results occurred in patients with recurrence of symptoms or stricture formation due to reflux oesophagitis. The excellent results even on long-term follow-up, we believe are due to the adequate myotomy that was performed.
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PMID:Achalasia cardia: a review of 100 cases. 28 Mar 19

Dysphagia is the most disabling symptom for patients with carcinoma of the oesophagus. Bowel segment bypass surgery offers satisfactory relief, but is often complicated by anastomotic leakage with its associated high mortality. Poor vascular perfusion of the cervical end of a bypass segment is an important cause of breakdown and leakage. A technique of cervical-mesenteric vascular anastomosis to improve the blood supply of the bypass is described and a case is reported.
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PMID:Mesenteric-cervical vascular anastomosis as an adjunct to oesophageal bypass surgery for carcinoma. 29 16

A 71-year-old woman developed dysphagia and hematemesis with an endoscopic diagnosis of esophageal submucosal hematoma. Post mortem examination demonstrated an aorto-esophageal fistula as the etiology of her hematemesis. The differential diagnosis of upper gastrointestinal bleeding in the elderly patient without cirrhosis is discussed. A review of the literature on aorto-esophageal fistula is included.
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PMID:Aortic aneurysm eroding the esophagus. Case report and review. 30 Feb 22

Two adults were admitted to the University Hospital of Geneva with acute Haemophilus influenzae type b epiglottitis. The disease was characterized by rapid progression of sore throat, upper dysphagia, fever and dyspnea. Acute upper airway obstruction required emergency tracheotomy in both cases. The patients recovered under ampicillin therapy. All the 100 cases from the literature for which clinical data were available have been analyzed:--Epiglottitis in adult is not exceptional.--Haemophilus influenzae type b is the most common infective organism documented, and was found in all positive blood cultures but one.--The typical presentation is severe sore throat, with upper dysphagia, fever and dyspnea.--Clinical course is rapid and serious, and acute respiratory distress develops in 57% of cases; overall mortality is 27%.--Emergency routine tracheotomy appears to be the most reliable treatment.
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PMID:[Acute epiglottitides in the adult]. 30 60

Twenty-four patients with gastro-oesophageal reflux were treated by Nissen fundoplication over a three-year period. In 22 patients the symptoms of heartburn, reflux, or dysphagia were abolished or dramatically improved. The operative technique, complications, and reasons for the less successful outcome in the remaining two cases are discussed.
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PMID:Nissen fundoplication for gastro-oesophageal reflux. 31 95

On the basis of four cases from our own clinic and three outside cases, we describe a so-called, "telescope phenomenon". This involves a specific complication that may arise after fundoplication. The characteristic of this postoperative complication is the slipping down of the fundus cuff, accompanied by a telescopic pushing upwards of the cardia. Recurrent reflux and occasionally new manifestations of dysphagia are the clinical results of this. This paper describes the diagnostic procedure and therapy of the telescope phenomenon.
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PMID:[The telescope phenomenon. A complication possibility following fundoplication]. 33 92


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