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Query: UMLS:C0011168 (
dysphagia
)
15,644
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The indications for and findings in 431 consecutive patients who had upper gastrointestinal endoscopy in Zaria from June 1978 to August 1982 are reviewed. The major indications were dyspepsia (78.1%), upper gastro-intestinal bleeding (12.1%) and portal hypertension (4.2%). Other indications were persistent vomiting,
dysphagia
and abdominal masses. The mean age of the patients was 32 years. The male: female ratio (3:1) was not different from that in the hospital population. There were no abnormal findings in 32.7%. 26.6% had duodenal ulcers.
Duodenitis
was noted in 24.8%, oesophageal varices in 6.3%, gastritis in 6.3% and hiatus hernia in 4.6%. In those who presented with upper-gastrointestinal haemorrhage, oesophageal varices (34.6%) and peptic ulcer (17.3%) were the commonest findings. Complication seen commonly were soreness in the throat and thrombophlebitis at the site of valium injection. One death was recorded from the procedure over the period.
...
PMID:Upper gastrointestinal endoscopy in Zaria, northern Nigeria. 208 5
This report describes a series of 553 flexible upper gastrointestinal (GI) endoscopies performed on 382 children in two surgical centers between 1975 and 1987. Indications included abdominal pain (180), reassessment of known disease (149), upper GI bleeding (99), foreign body ingestion (77), vomiting (14),
dysphagia
(10), and miscellaneous (24). Findings were chronic peptic ulcer (47), gastritis/
duodenitis
(63), healing disease (92), nonhealing disease (22), recurrent disease (32), foreign body impaction (22), stricture (9), esophagitis (7), varices (7), mass (6 [3 polyp, 1 lymphoma, 1 fungus ball, 1 inflammation]), normal (209), and miscellaneous (37). Endoscopic diagnosis was uniformly correct except on two occasions, when the presence of recurrent tracheoesophageal fistula in small infants was missed due to use of an inadequate instrument. A pathologic lesion is likely to be identifiable in GI bleeding (84.8%). Endoscopic surveillance for progress of known disease was found to be valuable, particularly in peptic ulcer management, as both incomplete healing after standard therapy as well as recurrence are frequent. The recent practice of routine antral biopsy in children with severe "nonspecific abdominable pain" enabled four cases of Campylobacter pylori colonization in the stomach to be diagnosed, thus allowing appropriate treatment. Endoscopy was therapeutic on 61 occasions: injection sclerotherapy (32), foreign body removal (20), polypectomy (3), and stricture dilatation (6). Endoscopy-guided bougienage, in particular, represents a recent major advance. There was no morbidity or mortality in the entire series. It is concluded that pediatric upper GI endoscopy performed by experienced surgeons is safe and effective. As a result of better understanding and technological advances, a changing trend of wider and more rational applications of the procedure is now evident.
...
PMID:Pediatric upper gastrointestinal endoscopy: a 13-year experience. 273 8
Gastroenteric changes in patients suffering from connectivitis observed consecutively between 1977 and 1986 have been examined: of the 24 patients (20 f, 4 m) aged between 13 and 76 yrs observed, 12 suffered from rheumatoid arthritis, 8 systemic lupus erythematosus, 2 sclerodermia, 2 mixed connectivitis. 14 reported gastroenteric disturbances, particularly dyspepsia, rarely
dysphagia
, diarrhoea, melena. Gastroenteric lesions, gastroesophageal reflux, erosive oesophagitis, oesophageal diverticulum, congestive gastritis,
duodenitis
, duodenal ulcer, diverticular colonopathy were observed, confirming the frequency of gastroenteric changes in connectivitis.
...
PMID:[Connectivitis and diseases of the digestive system]. 276 49
45 patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) were studied with gastrointestinal endoscopy (42 upper endoscopies and 12 colonoscopies). 28 patients had skin or buccal Kaposi's sarcoma with or without opportunistic infections and 17 had opportunistic infections. 12 patients out of 45 (27 per cent) had 1 or several Kaposi's sarcoma macroscopic gastrointestinal localisations, 12 documented by upper endoscopy and 4 by colonoscopy. Endoscopic biopsies confirmed the diagnosis 5 times out of 16 (31 per cent). 16 patients (38 per cent) had candidosis oesophagitis, 1 had ulcerative antritis, 2 had a erythematosus
duodenitis
, 6 had diffuse inflammatory mucosal colonic changes. The specific abnormalities documented by histology were 1 case of total villous atrophy and 2 cases of cytomegalovirus colitis. The patients with cutaneous Kaposi's sarcoma have more often shown gastrointestinal Kaposi's sarcoma than the patients without Kaposi's sarcoma. The prevalence of tumoral or major (diffuse candidosis oesophagitis, ulcerative antritis, active colitis) endoscopic abnormalities documented by upper endoscopy was 40 per cent (10 cases out of 25) in asymptomatic patients, 43 per cent in diarrheic patients (3 cases out of 7) and 60 per cent (6 cases out of 10) in patients with
dysphagia
, epigastralgic pain or vomiting and that of documented by colonoscopy was 75 per cent (3 cases out of 4) in patients with mucus or bloody stools and 14 per cent (1 case out of 7) in diarrheic patients. The main result of the endoscopy on AIDS patients has therefore been the diagnosis of visceral localisations of Kaposi's sarcoma. The appearance of the secondary major lesions related to opportunistic infections is unusual, especially in asymptomatic patients. A systematic endoscopy on these patients remains a disputed question.
...
PMID:[Value of digestive endoscopic examination in acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (45 cases)]. 372 85
We studied the gastrointestinal manifestations in 26 cases of AIDS. The patients belonged to two different epidemiological groups: the first group included thirteen french homosexual men, the second group included 6 Haitians, 6 Africans and a Pakistanian, none of them admit homosexual activity. The clinical manifestations were: chronic watery diarrhea in 17 cases, bloody diarrhea in 2 cases; loss of weight in the 26 cases;
dysphagia
in five cases; jaundice in one patient (due to Kaposi sarcoma of the ampulla of Vater). The digestive lesions found, alone or associated, were necrotizing enteritis (2), ulcerative colitis (1), pseudomembranous colitis (1), Candida esophagitis (10), erythematous
duodenitis
(6), proctitis (4), Kaposi sarcoma (3), diffuse (2) or localized (1). Thirteen patients out of the 26 presented opportunistic digestive infections due to one or several germs. These were 10 cases of esophageal infection (due to Candida albicans) and 8 cases of enterocolonic infection due to Cytomegalovirus (3 cases), Cryptosporidium (3 cases), Mycobacterium avium intracellulare (1 case), Cryptococcus neoformans (1 case). The other digestive infections cases were due to non-opportunistic pathogens: Entamoeba histolytica (3 cases); Giardia lamblia (3 cases); Strongyloides stercoralis (2 cases); Salmonella typhi (2 cases); Shigella (1 case); Herpes simplex virus (1 case). No difference was noticed between the homosexual and the heterosexual groups with respect to the nature and the frequency of the digestive infections.
...
PMID:[Digestive manifestations of the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS): study in 26 patients]. 399 15
We studied 26 cases of digestive manifestation in AIDS. The 26 patients were divided into two different epidemiological groups: 13 homosexual men, constituted the first group; no homosexual patient was in the second group which included 6 haitians, 6 africans and a pakistanian. The clinical manifestation were: a watery chronical diarrhea in 17 cases a bloody diarrhea in 2 cases; a loss of weight in the 26 cases; a
dysphagia
in five cases; a jaundice in one patient (due to Kaposi sarcoma of the ampulla of Vater). The digestive lesions found, alone or associated, were necrotizing enteritis (2), ulcerative colitis (1), pseudomembranous colitis (1), candida oesophagitis (10), erythematous
duodenitis
(6), proctitis (4), Kaposi sarcoma (3) diffuse (2) or localized (1). 13 patients out of the 26 presented opportunistic digestive infections due to one or several germs. The were 10 cases of oesophageal infection (due to (Candida albicans) and 8 cases of enterocolic infection due to Cytomegalovirus (3 cases), Cryptosporidium (3 cases), Mycobacterium avium intracellulare (1 case), Cryptococcus neoformans (1 case). The other digestive infections cases were due to non opportunistic pathogens: Entamoeba histolytica (3 cases); Giardia lamblia (3 cases); Strongyloides stercoralis (2 cases); Salmonella typhi (2 cases); Shigella (1 case). Neither the nature nor the frequency of the digestive infections was different from the first epidemiological group to the second one.
...
PMID:[Gastrointestinal manifestations of AIDS]. 409 4
Endoscopic experience in patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) has rarely been reported in Taiwan. We present our experience in 9 AIDS patients (8 male and 1 female, age from 26 to 63 years) with 12 examinations. The risk factor of these patients were bisexual in 3, homosexual in 2, hemophilia in 1, drug abuse in 1, and paid-sex in 2. Odynophagia or
dysphagia
was the major complaints. Oral ulcers or/and thrush were noted in 8 patients. Endoscopic findings included negative (6/12), candidiasis (3/12), erosions (1/12), ulcers (1/12) and ulcer scar (1/12) in esophagus; negative (8/12), gastritis (1/12), erosions (1/12), ulcers (1/12) and Kaposi's sarcoma (1/12) in stomach; and negative (11/12) and
duodenitis
(1/12) in duodenum. Patients with esophageal candidiasis always had oral thrush.
Dysphagia
was highly correlated with positive endoscopic findings in esophagus. It is important for an endoscopist to identify clinical symptoms and to examine patient's oral cavity before an endoscopic examination. The endoscopist must keep himself from being infected by exposure to contaminated blood and secretion and avoid dissemination of this horrible disease by undisinfected instruments.
...
PMID:Endoscopic examination in patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome: Taiwan experience. 840 71
A retrospective study of 200 endoscopies performed on 168 children (90 girls and 78 boys) aged 3 months to 18 years (median 6 years) is reported. All procedures were completed successfully in an adult endoscopy unit in a comprehensive health centre. Most children of less than 6 months and above 12 years of age needed no intravenous sedation. One child developed respiratory depression and was successfully resuscitated. Indications for endoscopy were: small intestinal biopsy, 78 (46%); recurrent abdominal pain, 40 (24%); acute epigastric pain, 13 (8%); persistent vomiting, 12 (7%); haemorrhage, 10 (6%); caustic substance ingestion, six (4%); and
dysphagia
, four (2%) children. Positive diagnoses were obtained in 123 (62%) procedures. Coeliac disease (26 cases) was the most common histological diagnosis, followed by gastritis (19 cases), oesophagitis (18 cases),
duodenitis
(16 cases), duodenal ulcer (11 cases), hiatus hernia (six cases), gastric ulcer (three cases) and oesophageal stricture (two cases). Where specialized paediatric endoscopy units are not feasible, e.g. in developing countries, endoscopic services for children can be safely provided by paediatric endoscopists as part of an adult endoscopy service, provided that suitable resuscitation equipment is available and the necessary modifications to meet the medical and psychological needs of children and their parents are taken into consideration.
...
PMID:Paediatric upper gastro-intestinal endoscopy in developing countries. 898 32
A total of 10,000 patients underwent upper gastrointestinal endosopy examination between August 1979 and October 1994 at Tikur Anbessa Hospital, Addis Ababa. The major indications were dyspepsia (59.4%), upper gastrointestinal bleeding (18%) and liver disease (10.8%). The other indications include
dysphagia
(2.2%), gastric outlet obstruction (2.1%), postoperative dyspeptic symptoms (1.9%), weight loss and/or anemia (1.4%), epigastric mass (0.6%) and odynophagia 0.2%. The mean age of the patients and their sex ratio was 36 years and 2:1, respectively. Twenty eight percent of the patients had normal findings. The commonest abnormal findings include duodenal ulcer (41%), esophageal varices (9%), acute gastritis (6%),
duodenitis
(3.4%), and reflux esophagitis (2.3%). Benign gastric ulcer was rare. The ratio of duodenal ulcer to gastric ulcer was 19.1%. Duodenal ulcer (45.6%), esophageal varices (15.6) and acute gastritis (5.7%) were found to be the commonest causes of upper gastrointestinal bleeding. The endoscopy or histology diagnosis of cancer in both the esophagus and stomach was 2.8% and 1.3%, respectively. The agreement between endoscopy and histology in the diagnosis of esophageal and gastric cancer was 80%. There was no major complication related to endoscopy or premeditation. Endoscopy is a fairly accurate and safe procedure and therefore should be available and applied widely for the diagnosis of upper gastrointestinal diseases in Ethiopia.
...
PMID:Upper gastrointestinal endoscopy: a review of 10,000 cases. 1689 26