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Query: UMLS:C0011168 (
dysphagia
)
15,644
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Esophageal
distention, motor abnormalities, or exposure of the esophageal mucosa to acidic gastric juice can cause chest pain indistinguishable from that of myocardial ischemia in patients with and without coronary artery disease. In these situations the exact cause of the symptom needs to be established prior to any surgical therapy. An antireflux procedure relieves chest pain in patients with increased esophageal acid exposure more reliably than medical therapy. The best results are obtained in patients in whom a direct correlation of the symptom with reflux episodes can be documented on 24-hour esophageal pH monitoring. Ambulatory 24-hour esophageal motility monitoring shows that esophageal motor disorders are a less frequent cause of noncardiac chest pain than suggested by standard manometry or provocation tests. Furthermore, chest pain episodes in patients with esophageal motor abnormalities are not associated with single contractions of excessively high amplitude or duration. Rather, the symptom appears to be triggered by an increased frequency of simultaneous, multipeaked, and repetitive motor activity. In appropriately selected patients with chest pain and
dysphagia
secondary to an esophageal motor abnormality, a long esophageal myotomy eliminates the ability of the esophagus to produce these contractions, reduces or eliminates
dysphagia
, and decreases the frequency and severity of chest pain episodes.
...
PMID:Therapy of noncardiac chest pain: is there a role for surgery? 159 57
A minority of patients presenting with the common clinical challenge of unexplained chest pain can be diagnosed as having an esophageal etiology for their pain using conventional manometric and provocative (acid infusion and edrophonium) testing.
Esophageal
balloon distention may provide an important adjuvant to routine testing. Most pain from the esophagus is mediated by visceral sensory receptors located near the myenteric plexus; these receptors respond to movements of the organ wall in response to contractions or distention. Balloon distention can be used to simulate this wall movement. Early clinical studies have been expanded by recent investigations demonstrating a lowered pain threshold in response to balloon distention in patients with both unexplained chest pain and nonobstructive
dysphagia
. The physiologic basis for this increased sensitivity is not clear. Balloon distention has several effects on esophageal motility that may play a role in producing pain. The recording of cerebral evoked potentials is a technique newly developed to provide an objective measurement of the subjective sensation of pain. Electrical and mechanical stimulation of the esophagus has been shown to produce cerebral evoked potentials. Recent investigations of cerebral potentials evoked by balloon-induced esophageal stimulation have confirmed that this response depends on pain production, have clarified the appropriate stimulus parameters, and have localized the site of origin of the evoked potential to the balloon site. Balloon distention may prove to be an important addition to current esophageal provocative testing, although widespread applicability has been hampered by the lack of a commercially available standardized balloon. Recording evoked potentials produced by esophageal stimulation may provide additional clues in unraveling the mystery of unexplained chest pain.
...
PMID:Esophageal balloon distention and cerebral evoked potential recording in the evaluation of unexplained chest pain. 159 60
From April 1985 to November 1990, 12 patients with adenocarcinoma in a Barrett's esophagus, all of them men, with a median age of 62 years (range, 46 to 79 years), were operated by transhiatal esophagectomy and were submitted to a periodic follow-up.
Dysphagia
was the main symptom. Preoperative investigations included esogastroscopy and CT-scan of the abdomen and thorax in all patients.
Esophageal
endosonography was performed in the last 4 cases and MRI in one case. All patients recovered postoperatively and were discharged from hospital. The resected specimens were staged according to Rosenberg et al.'s classification: stage 1, 3 patients, stage 2, 2 patients, stage 3, 6 patients, stage 4, 1 patient. An anastomotic stricture occurred in 4 patients and was treated successfully by endoscopic dilatation. Five patients died during the follow-up period. Seven patients are alive without evidence of recurrence. Transhiatal esophagectomy appears to be the procedure of choice for adenocarcinoma arising from Barrett's esophagus.
...
PMID:[Esophagectomy without thoracotomy for adenocarcinoma in Barrett's esophagus]. 161 83
While an alkaline component to esophageal reflux disease is known to be present, little is known about its etiology and harmful effects. Simultaneous gastric and esophageal 24-hour pH monitoring was performed in 81 patients with foregut symptoms. The presence of a mechanically defective lower esophageal sphincter was determined by manometry and duodenogastric reflux by computer-assisted discriminant analysis of the gastric pH record. Heartburn,
dysphagia
, and regurgitation occurred more frequently in those with a mechanically defective sphincter (p < 0.05) and epigastric pain in those with duodenogastric reflux (p < 0.05). Esophagitis was more common and severe in those with a mechanically defective sphincter (p < 0.05). In these patients, the percentage of time over 24 hours that the esophageal pH was less than 4 was 40.5% in patients without duodenogastric reflux but only 10.2% in those with duodenogastric reflux (p < 0.005), suggesting acid damage in the former and alkaline damage in the latter. To establish the origin of the esophageal alkaline exposure, episodes of elevated fasting gastric pH greater than 4 lasting longer than 1 minute were searched for and identified in 45 patients.
Esophageal
pH tracings were compared for 30 minutes before and after these events. The esophageal pH was higher following these episodes in duodenogastric reflux patients (p < 0.05), suggesting a gastroduodenal origin of the esophageal alkalinization. This study shows that esophageal damage may be due to acid or alkaline reflux. The alkaline component of gastroesophageal reflux is important and should be considered in the evaluation of patients with foregut symptoms so that appropriate medical or surgical therapy can be instituted.
...
PMID:Etiology and importance of alkaline esophageal reflux. 167 Feb 23
Primary noncarcinomatous malignant neoplasms of the esophagus are uncommon and data concerning treatment and results are sparse. To evaluate the results of therapy in this group, we reviewed the records of 32 patients with primary esophageal malignant tumors of unusual histologic type. Thirteen patients (41%) had sarcoma, eight (25%) melanoma, and 11 (34%) had oat cell carcinoma.
Dysphagia
was present in 78% (25/32) of the patients for a median of 13 weeks before diagnosis. Location of the esophageal primary tumor was upper third in four patients (12%), middle third in 12 (38%), and lower third in 16 (50%). Treatment consisted of esophagectomy in 10 of 13 patients with sarcoma (77%), seven of eight with melanoma (88%), and three of 11 with oat cell carcinoma (27%). Patients not undergoing resection received chemotherapy or radiation therapy, or both. The 3- and 5-year survival rates were 46% and 23% for sarcoma (median 20 months), 13% and 0% for melanoma (median 5 months), and 0% and 0% for oat cell carcinoma (median 5 months), respectively. Distant disease was the initial form of recurrence in 73% (11/15) of patients undergoing curative therapy. Surgical resection appears indicated for localized primary esophageal sarcoma. Optimum treatment of primary esophageal melanoma is less clear, but surgical resection may be of benefit in selected patients.
Esophageal
oat cell carcinoma is a systemic disease necessitating systemic therapy with local therapy reserved for palliation of
dysphagia
.
...
PMID:Unusual malignant neoplasms of the esophagus. Oat cell carcinoma, melanoma, and sarcoma. 170 94
A 70-year-old woman with no previous gastroesophageal surgery gave a 6-month history of
dysphagia
. Barium studies suggested a diagnosis of achalasia.
Esophageal
manometry showed absence of peristalsis and a high lower esophageal sphincter pressure. Endoscopy showed a dilated esophagus with food residue, and Barrett's esophagus was present. The association of Barrett's esophagus and achalasia must be rare.
...
PMID:Barrett's esophagus and achalasia. A case report. 174 94
Conventional oesophageal manometry is seldom accompanied by symptoms and may indeed be normal in patients with a history of
dysphagia
. We have recently shown that oesophageal manometry during eating may be helpful in the evaluation of patients with
dysphagia
but there has been little systematic comparison of fed oesophageal motor patterns with conventional clinical manometry.
Oesophageal
manometry in response to water swallows and during eating was therefore examined in 58 consecutive patients who had been referred for clinical oesophageal function studies. The patients were divided into three groups according to the percentage of peristaltic activity during conventional manometry: group 1 (n = 21) had 100% peristalsis; group 2 (n = 29) had 1-99% peristalsis and group 3 (n = 8) were aperistaltic. All the patients in group 3 had achalasia and remained aperistaltic during eating, however, was less than with water swallows in both group 1 (53% compared with 100%) and group 2 (49% compared with 82.3%) patients. Synchronous contractions and non-conducted swallows were correspondingly increased during eating. Although there was a significant correlation between the amplitude of peristaltic contractions with water and bread in groups 1 and 2, mean peristaltic amplitudes were less with bread than with water swallows. The data show that there are substantial differences in the distal oesophageal motility patterns produced by water swallows and by eating. Conventional manometry with water swallows does not allow prediction of the fed oesophageal motility pattern, except in patients with achalasia.
...
PMID:Systematic comparison of conventional oesophageal manometry with oesophageal motility while eating bread. 175 52
Transesophageal echocardiography is a new approach that can be used to image cardiac structures. It combines two existing technologies: cardiac ultrasound and endoscopy. To obtain a cardiac image, the transesophageal probe has to be positioned properly within the esophagus. The first 1500 consecutive transesophageal echocardiographic examinations in ambulatory adult patients from one center were analyzed to identify conditions associated with failed esophageal intubation and procedural complications.
Esophageal
intubation was not achieved in 11 patients (0.73%). The reasons for the failure of intubation were operator inexperience, hypersensitive pharynx despite topical anesthesia, and cervical spondylosis. Six of those patients also had a history of
dysphagia
. Procedural complications were identified in seven patients (0.47%). Tracheal intubation was present in four patients, with immediate development of stridor and incessant cough in two patients. Atrial fibrillation developed in two patients--one had atrial myxoma and one had mitral stenosis. Bronchospasm developed during the transesophageal examination in one patient who was receiving long-term treatment for bronchial asthma. We conclude that transesophageal echocardiography is feasible in most adult patients in the ambulatory setting and that the complication rate is very low. Proper patient selection and preparation are crucial to the successful performance of this procedure.
...
PMID:Complications of transesophageal echocardiography in ambulatory adult patients: analysis of 1500 consecutive examinations. 176 Jan 79
Twenty-nine female patients with definite or classical rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and 30 controls were investigated in order to evaluate oral symptoms, particularly xerostomia, and swallowing difficulties in RA by means of a questionnaire, physical examination, stimulated saliva secretion, labial salivary gland biopsy, esophageal manometry and laboratory blood tests. Xerostomia was reported by 6 patients (21%), compared with no-one in the control group. Four of these 6 patients had decreased stimulated saliva secretion, compared with 2 of the remaining 23 patients.
Dysphagia
was experienced by 8 patients (28%), compared with one control subject.
Dysphagia
was associated with disease severity.
Esophageal
manometry revealed a decrease of the amplitude of the peristaltic pressure complex in the proximal part of esophagus in the RA group, indicating dysfunction of the striated muscles. No correlation was found between
dysphagia
and esophageal manometry results.
...
PMID:Swallowing problems in rheumatoid arthritis. 176 39
Fifty-one patients with systemic sclerosis (scleroderma) underwent videofluoroscopy during barium swallow to evaluate the incidence of oropharyngeal deglutition abnormalities and to correlate the radiologic patterns of esophageal motility abnormalities with patients' clinical features. Thirteen patients (26%) showed swallowing dysfunction, (e.g., oral leakage, retention, penetration, mild or moderate aspiration, and upper esophageal sphincter incoordination). These dysfunctions were more severe in patients with prominent esophageal dysmotility. Normal esophageal motility was not associated with swallowing alterations. Patients with an oropharyngeal disorder had a higher incidence of pulmonary disease. The clinical picture of the above-mentioned 13 patients was more severe, based on the duration of Raynaud's phenomenon and duration of skin sclerosis. Patients with primary Raynaud's phenomenon had no oral or esophageal abnormalities. The esophageal phase of swallowing was abnormal in 80% of the patients with scleroderma.
Esophageal
dysfunction, therefore, seems to be frequent in the early stages of the disease. However, patients with advanced or extensive disease may have normal esophageal function.
Dysphagia
1991
PMID:Oropharyngeal and esophageal function in scleroderma. 177
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