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

Symptomatic gastroesophageal reflux occurs daily in an estimated 7% of adults and weekly or monthly in 29%. Untreated it can lead to esophageal erosions, ulceration and stricture formation. The pathogenesis is often multifactorial: defects in the function of the lower esophageal sphincter, esophageal clearance mechanisms and gastric emptying combine to produce frequent lengthy periods during which the lower esophagus is bathed in regurgitated acid. In most patients reflux disease is easily recognized as recurrent heartburn, regurgitation or dysphagia, or a combination. When acute chest pain or respiratory illness is the primary presenting complaint the patient needs particularly careful investigation to determine whether the symptoms are due to a primary cardiac or respiratory condition, are secondary to gastroesophageal reflux alone or represent a combination of disorders. Endoscopy with biopsy and long-term pH monitoring are the most reliable ways of determining whether reflux disease is present. Additional investigations, such as exercise testing, cardiac catheterization or inhalation challenge, may be needed in patients with cardiac or respiratory symptoms. Treatment should follow a stepped-care approach and in most patients should begin with changes in lifestyle, including dietary manipulation, reducing alcohol and cigarette consumption, and raising the head of the bed, together with appropriate use of antacids or alginate-antacid combinations. H2-receptor antagonists and agents to improve both gastric emptying and the tone of the lower esophageal sphincter may be added in sequence. Most patients will respond well to this regimen. Surgery should be considered only for those with intractable symptoms or with complications (e.g., stricture formation, bleeding, development of dysplastic epithelium in those with Barrett's esophagus, or secondary pulmonary disease that does not respond to medical management). It is successful in 85% of well-selected patients and has few complications.
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PMID:Gastroesophageal reflux: clinical presentations, diagnosis and management. 287 69

Esophageal function was evaluated in 53 patients with increasing severity of esophageal injury caused by gastroesophageal reflux disease (study 1), and the findings were applied to the treatment of 28 patients with reflux-induced strictures (study 2). Fifty asymptomatic volunteers served as controls for both studies. In study 1 there were 14 patients without reflux complications, 14 with esophagitis grade I to III, 13 with esophageal stricture, and 12 with Barrett's epithelium (6 of whom had a stricture). The prevalence of a mechanically defective sphincter increased with the progression of the esophageal injury; 50% in the patients without complications to 84% and 92% in those with stricture or Barrett's epithelium, respectively. Similarly, a decrease in amplitude of contractions in the distal esophagus was observed in patients with stricture and patients with Barrett's epithelium. In study 2, these findings were applied in the surgical management of 28 consecutive patients with a reflux-induced stricture. Preoperative motility studies were performed after patients were dilated to 60F. Control of reflux by a Nissen fundoplication gave excellent (86%) to good (14%) results in patients who had relief of dysphagia after dilation or adequate motility, or both. Four patients with both persistent dysphagia after dilation and inadequate motility underwent resection. Transmural presented are helpful in the selection of the optimal surgical procedure for the treatment of dilatable reflux-induced strictures.
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PMID:Esophageal function in patients with reflux-induced strictures and its relevance to surgical treatment. 293 Mar 1

A 57-year-old woman presented with a 3-week history of dysphagia for solids, 6 months after starting treatment with nifedipine. Endoscopy demonstrated oesophagitis and a benign oesophageal stricture. Twenty-four-hour ambulatory pH monitoring demonstrated decreased acid reflux 8 weeks after withdrawal of nifedipine, with coincidental symptomatic and endoscopic improvement. Nifedipine may induce, or aggravate, pre-existing, gastro-oesophageal reflux.
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PMID:Gastro-oesophageal reflux associated with nifedipine. 297 56

EGD, using 1986 models of either the fiberoptic gastroscope or the videoscope, is a safe and accurate procedure that can be performed by any physician trained in the technique of endoscope passage. It may be performed at large medical centers or small rural hospitals, outpatient clinics, or even private offices. Patients themselves have indicated preference for endoscopic evaluation over the double-contrast barium meal after they have experienced both procedures. The short time of procedure, its accuracy, safety, and its relative lack of discomfort to the patient lend it readily to being an initial component in the primary evaluation of symptoms of abdominal distress, gastrointestinal bleeding, dysphagia, esophageal reflux, persistent vomiting, and odynophagia. It is essential in the evaluation of complications of esophageal reflux and the evaluation of abnormal radiological findings in the upper gastrointestinal tract. It should never be overlooked in evaluating the patient with iron deficiency anemia of unknown etiology. Economic pressures have already moved EGD from the surgery wards to endoscopy labs and to the outpatient setting. These same forces will project more physicians into the role of the diagnostic endoscopist and the patient will benefit by decreased medical costs, quicker diagnosis and treatment, and enhanced continuity of care.
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PMID:Gastroscopy: a primary diagnostic procedure. 304 90

Twenty one children with achalasia of the esophagus were treated from 1970 to 1986. There were 11 girls and ten boys (average age, 10.9 years; range, 6 months to 16 years). Diagnosis was established by barium swallow in 21 cases and confirmed by manometrics and motility studies in 14. Four children had unsuccessful dilatation (range, 1 to 16 dilatations/pt). All 21 children underwent modified anterior Heller esophagomyotomy (transabdominal in 15 and transthoracic in six). Concomitant Nissen fundoplication was performed in three. Follow-up from 1 to 14 years (mean, 6.3 years) showed complete relief of obstruction in 18 patients (86%), while three required additional procedures for persistent dysphagia. One child improved after a single dilatation, but two others eventually required a second esophagomyotomy. Three additional patients subsequently developed gastroesophageal reflux (GER), and two were managed with Nissen fundoplication; the third responded to medical management. The mortality for this series was zero. Postoperative complications occurred in nine children (42%) and was due to atelectasis and postoperative fever. Modified Heller esophagomyotomy is safe and effective in children with achalasia (mortality, 0%; relief of obstruction, 86%). Results were similar after a transabdominal or transthoracic approach. Esophageal dilatation was not an effective method of treatment. Although postsurgical barium swallow showed relief of obstruction, abnormal esophageal motility persisted, suggesting that long-term follow-up is important.
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PMID:Late results following esophagomyotomy in children with achalasia. 304 57

The aetiologic factors in gastro-oesophageal reflux disease include the free reflux of gastric juice, the composition of refluxed juice, the defensive mechanisms of the oesophagus, which are both mechanical and mucosal, and, sometimes, gastric abnormalities. Symptoms include heartburn, odynophagia, chest pain, dysphagia, regurgitation, and, occasionally, haemorrhage. Respiratory symptoms may occur. Diagnosis is based on determining the pressure and frequency of reflux (for which pH monitoring is preferred), testing for symptoms that may be caused by reflux, and assessing the degree of oesophagitis, for which endoscopy and histology are the only known techniques.
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PMID:Aetiology, pathogenesis, and clinical manifestations of gastro-oesophageal reflux disease. 306 36

Complete fundoplication at present is the most effective surgical treatment of gastro-oesophageal reflux. However, it has a number of side-effects, including post-operative dysphagia, inability to eructate and painful gastric distension. Fifty-five patients were operated upon using a technique which comprises wide gastric release and fabrication of a tension-free valve around a 50F probe introduced through the mouth. After 1 year, 94% of patients were free of reflux and 22% had mild dysphagia. After 3 years, the proportion of reflux-free patients still was 94%; 12% suffered from mild dysphagia and 6% had problems with eructation. Thus, calibration of the oesophagus with a 50F probe reduces the side-effects of complete fundoplication while remaining effective against gastro-oesophageal reflux.
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PMID:[Completed calibrated fundoplication]. 315 34

Ninety-one adult patients (average age 49 years) with various benign esophageal disorders treated by total thoracic esophagectomy and a cervical esophagogastric anastomosis have been followed up with personal interviews and examinations from 6 to 104 months (average 34 months). Outpatient esophageal dilation has been used liberally for any degree of postoperative cervical dysphagia. At their latest follow-up, 39 patients (43%) eat without dysphagia; four patients (4%) have mild dysphagia necessitating no treatment; 34 patients (37%) have undergone one to three dilations during the first 6 to 12 postoperative months for intermittent dysphagia; and 14 patients (16%) have more severe dysphagia necessitating regular anastomotic dilations (two thirds of these perform home self-dilations). Mild regurgitation of gastric contents has been experienced by 27 (30%), particularly when recumbent after eating, but only four patients sleep with the head of the bed elevated to prevent nocturnal regurgitation. No patient has had pulmonary complications resulting from aspiration. Twenty patients (22%) have had varying degrees of "dumping syndrome," generally transient and well controlled with medication. Two patients have required an additional gastric drainage operation 16 months and 82 months, respectively, after the esophagectomy. At their latest evaluation, 33% of the patients weigh 3 to 83 (average 19) pounds more than they weighed preoperatively, 38% weigh 5 to 40 (average 12) pounds less, and 29% have had no change in their weight. The stomach functions well as a visceral esophageal substitute and, like the esophagus, is more thick-walled and resilient than colon. Significant gastroesophageal reflux is uncommon after a properly performed cervical esophagogastric anastomosis. Postoperative dysphagia can be minimized by attention to technique in constructing the anastomosis. These data support our belief that the stomach is the preferred organ for esophageal replacement, not only for carcinoma, but also for benign diseases as well.
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PMID:Cervical esophagogastric anastomosis for benign disease. Functional results. 319

We studied 14 patients with PSS, 12 females and 2 males with a mean age of 43.6 and a medium of 8 years disease. All of the patients were selected for this study according to updated ARA criteria and were included in a prospective protocol to investigate digestive involvement. This protocol consists of a complete medical history, physical examination, radiologic and endoscopic studies, parasitological and microbial flora investigation. The symptoms more frequently seen were: pyrosis (78%), gastroesophageal regurgitation (50%), flatulence (50%), dysphagia (42%) and chronic diarrhea (21%). The radiologic findings commonly seen were: distal esophageal aperistalsis (78%), gastroesophageal reflux (57%), dilatation of intestinal loops (35%), changes of the mucosal folds (35%). A mild esophagitis was seen endoscopically in 64% of the patients, moderate and severe in 7% respectively. The study of the microbial flora showed contaminations with enterobacteria in 5 patients (35%). After statistical analysis we concluded that the digestive compromise by PSS is frequent, being the esophagus more commonly affected (80%), at the beginning in the form of reflux esophagitis and later in esophageal stenosis, the compromise of the small intestine (40%) is manifested by chronic diarrhea or dyspeptic flatulence, which correlates well the radiologic findings and the bacterial overgrowth in this organ. The colonic compromise generally is asymptomatic, and the common finding is dilatation os the colonic loops. Finally, the bacterial overgrowth in the small intestine is a secondary involvement to the intestinal compromise of Progressive Systemic Sclerosis.
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PMID:[Digestive involvement in progressive systemic sclerosis]. 322 28

Thirty-seven patients with gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) were included in an esophageal manometry study before and six months after fundoplication. The motility pattern of the body of the esophagus in the patient group was compared with that of 15 healthy controls. No differences in swallowing amplitudes were found between patients with different degrees of esophagitis or between GERD patients and controls. Peristaltic activity was slightly impaired in patients with endoscopic esophagitis compared with controls. No correlation was found between dysphagia and chest pain symptoms on the one hand and on peristaltic pattern and swallowing amplitudes on the other. It was concluded that conventional esophageal manometry has little to contribute to the investigation of symptoms such as non-burning chest pain and dysphagia in GERD. Effective anti-reflux surgery eliminates these symptoms with little influence on the esophageal motility pattern.
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PMID:Esophageal body motor disturbances in gastroesophageal reflux and the effects of fundoplication. 324 4


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