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

An 82 year old man was admitted to hospital with unstable angina pectoris. There was a long history of minor symptoms suggesting reflux disease, with a small diaphragmatic hernia. One day after admission the patient complained of severe chest pain. An acute inferior-posterior myocardial infarction was diagnosed on ECG, and thrombolytic treatment with alteplase (rt-PA) was initiated. Within a few hours total dysphagia occurred, caused by haemorrhagic oesophagitis. The haematoma resolved spontaneously within about 10 days. The patient was discharged three weeks later after full resolution of the dysphagia.
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PMID:Complete dysphagia after thrombolytic treatment for myocardial infarction. 1108 74

Both neurologic and medical complications influence outcome after stroke. Space-occupying supratentorial infarcts can cause transtentorial or uncal herniation, which leads to death. Treatments aimed at reducing intracranial pressure in patients with such infarcts are of unproven value. Mass-producing cerebellar infarction may lead to brainstem compression and obstructive hydrocephalus. These lesions often are treated surgically. Although anticonvulsants are not indicated for prophylaxis, the occurrence of epileptic seizures mandates treatment to prevent recurrences. Depression is common in the acute stage of stroke, but is probably not more prevalent after stroke than after myocardial infarction. Although dysphagia is common, it usually is a transient problem. Patients with a decrease of consciousness or brainstem dysfunction usually need tube feeding for a certain period of time. Medical complications, such as fever, infections, hyperglycemia, cardiac disorders, pressure sores, and deep venous thrombosis, are associated with a poor prognosis and should be treated as early as possible. Measures to prevent these complications are part of general care. Hypertension is very common during the week after stroke and should be treated only in case of extremely high values or malignant hypertension. A multidisciplinary approach in the stroke unit is necessary to prevent and manage complications in the acute phase of stroke.
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PMID:Treatment or prevention of complications of acute ischemic stroke. 1468 26

In three patients, a woman aged 87 years who presented with signs indicating a myocardial infarction, a man aged 31 suffering from postprandial epigastric pain that suddenly worsened, and a woman aged 60 years with longstanding postprandial pain and recent fatigue due to anaemia, a para-oesophageal hernia was diagnosed. Para-oesophageal herniation is an uncommon disorder accounting for approximately 5% of all hernias at the oesophageal hiatus. They are distinguished from the more common sliding hiatal hernia by a relative preservation of the intra-abdominal fixation of the gastro-oesophageal junction. These patients show that the clinical presentation of para-oesophageal rolling hernias is different from that of sliding hernias. Pathological reflux may occur; though symptoms associated with a relative obstruction of the stomach within the hernia sac, such as dysphagia, are more common. Rare non-specific symptoms such as anaemia and loss of weight are also seen. Adequate therapy differs from that of a sliding hernia and should be individualized: surgical correction is indicated in a healthy patient with a symptomatic para-oesophageal hernia, such as in the last patient. However, when the hernia is incidentally diagnosed or when comorbidity is present, such as in the first patient, a wait-and-see policy is recommended. Only in case of a threatening incarceration, such as in the second patient, is an emergency operation indicated.
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PMID:[The para-esophageal hernia: a rare hiatal hernia requiring a specific approach]. 1522 26

Despite major advances in skull base surgery and microsurgical techniques, surgery for vestibular schwannoma (VS) carries a risk of complications. Some are inherent to general anesthesia and surgery of any type and include myocardial infarction, pneumonia, pulmonary embolism, and infection. Some are specific to neurosurgery in this area of the brain, and include hydrocephalus, cerebrospinal fluid leak, facial nerve paralysis, facial numbness, hearing loss, ataxia, dysphagia, and major stroke. Even in the hands of very experienced acoustic surgeons, these risks cannot be eliminated. Radiosurgery provides an outpatient, noninvasive alternative for the treatment of small acoustic schwannomas. Initially radiosurgery was undertaken in "high-risk" patients, including the elderly, those with severe medical comorbidities, and those in whom tumors recurred after surgery. Additionally, a high rate of cranial nerve morbidity was reported. With improvements in dosimetry planning and dose selection, however, authors practicing at radiosurgical centers now report very low complication rates, as well as high tumor control rates. In this report the authors specifically review the results of linear accelerator-based radiosurgery for VS and compare these outcomes with the best surgical alternatives.
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PMID:Linear accelerator-based radiosurgery for vestibular schwannoma. 1566 13

Flexible endoscopic evaluation of swallowing with sensory testing (FEESST) is a comprehensive endoscopic assessment of the sensory and motor components of a swallow. Previous studies addressing patient safety issues with respect to FEESST included relatively small numbers of patients and paid almost no attention to patient characteristics. The purpose of this study was to determine the incidence of FEESST-related complications in the outpatient and inpatient settings and to analyze patient diagnoses that led to the performance of FEESST. We performed a prospective study of FEESST complications in 1,340 consecutive evaluations performed over a 4 1/2-year period. The primary outcome variables were incidence of epistaxis and airway compromise. The secondary outcome variable was underlying patient diagnoses. The incidence of epistaxis was 1 in 1,340 (0.07%). There were no instances of airway compromise. Stroke was the most common reason for the performance of FEESST (343; 25.6%), followed by cardiac-related dysphagia (298; 22.2%) following open heart surgery (169/298; 56.7%), heart attack, congestive heart failure, or new arrhythmia. The remaining causes were head and neck cancer (207; 15.4%), pulmonary disease (141; 10.5%), chronic neurologic disease (124; 9.3%), and acid reflux disease (80; 6.0%). We conclude that FEESST is a relatively safe procedure for the sensory and motor assessment of dysphagia in a cohort of patients with a wide variety of underlying diagnoses. The emergence of cardiac surgery as a common cause of dysphagia warrants further study.
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PMID:Flexible endoscopic evaluation of swallowing with sensory testing: patient characteristics and analysis of safety in 1,340 consecutive examinations. 1582 64

Subarachnoid hemorrhage and cerebral hemorrhage are the most frequent causes of sudden death due to stroke. Brainstem hemorrhage, which is the cause of respiratory and vasomotor centers dysfunction, is frequently the direct cause of sudden death caused by stroke, and not only cerebral edema, but also secondary lethal arrhythmia, myocardial infarction, pulmonary embolism, or asphyxiation by dysphagia may be indirect causes of death associated with stroke. To prevent sudden death due to stroke, management of respiratory and circulatory systems as well as treatment corresponding to the type or severity of the disease are required. In this issue, we discuss the cause, management, and prevention of sudden death due to stroke.
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PMID:[Sudden death due to stroke and its management]. 1600 84

A 72-year-old patient was admitted to our clinic following posterior wall myocardial infarction. Furthermore, he had suffered from dysphagia and intermittent regurgitation for a time period of two months. Radiological diagnostics revealed an esophageal impingement by the left atrium and the descending aorta due to severe thoracic scoliosis. This represents an infrequent form of cardiovascular esophageal compression.
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PMID:Cardiovascular dysphagia. 1659 46

Antireflux fundoplications are undertaken with hesitation in older patients because of presumed higher morbidity and poorer outcomes. This study was undertaken to determine if symptoms of gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) could be safely abrogated in a high-risk/reward popu lation of older patients. One hundred eight patients more than 70 years of age (range, 70-90 years) underwent laparoscopic Nissen fundoplications undertaken between 1992 and 2005 and were compared with 108 concurrent patients less than 60 years of age (range, 18-59 years) to determine relative outcomes. Before and after fundoplication, patients scored the severity of reflux and dysphagia on a Likert Scale (0 = minor, 10 = severe). Before fundoplication, older patients had lower reflux scores (P < 0.01), but not lower dysphagia scores or DeMeester scores. One patient (86 years old) died from myocardial infarction; otherwise, complications occurred infrequently, inconsequentially, and regardless of age. At similar durations of follow-up, reflux and dysphagia scores significantly improved (P < 0.01) for older and younger patients. After fundoplication, older patients had lower dysphagia scores (P < 0.01) and lower reflux scores (P < 0.01). At the most recent follow-up, 82 per cent of older patients rated their relief of symptoms as good or excellent. Similarly, 81 per cent of the younger patients reported good or excellent results. Ninety-one per cent of patients 70 years of age or more versus 85 per cent of patients less than 60 years would undergo laparoscopic Nissen fundoplication again, if necessary. With fundoplication, symptoms of GERD improve for older and younger patients, with less symptomatic dysphagia and reflux in older patients after fundoplication. Laparoscopic fundoplication safely ameliorates symptoms of GERD in elderly patients with symptomatic outcomes superior to those seen in younger patients.
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PMID:Results after laparoscopic fundoplication: does age matter? 1698 86

The authors present the case of a 62-year-old male who presented with dysphagia for 1 month after emergency intubation after sustaining a myocardial infarction. Subsequent clinical evaluation discovered an impacted partial denture as the source of this dysphagia. This case highlights clinically relevant issues regarding the multidisciplinary management of emergency intubation with subsequent dysphagia, the nature of dentures and their relevance to developmentally delayed individuals and an aging population. The diagnosis and management of impacted dentures involves valuable input from surgeons, physicians, radiologists and speech pathologists.
Dysphagia 2009 Mar
PMID:Dysphagia after emergency intubation: case report and literature review. 1843 62

We present an 82-year-old woman with a 3-month history of progressive dysphagia and a normal initial upper gastrointestinal endoscopy. The diagnosis of pseudoachalasia was suspected by oesophageal manometric and barium swallow studies, and confirmed by biopsies revealing an intestinal type carcinoma of the stomach at a repeated endoscopy. In view of the history of heart disease, diabetes, and old age, this patient was treated by a partially covered Ultraflex self-expanding metal stent (Boston Scientific, Natick, MA, USA) placed into the oesophageal body with no direct complications and obtaining the relief from dysphagia. During the 11-month follow-up she was treated for an iron deficiency anaemia due to reflux oesophagitis with ulcerations in the oesophageal body and died from myocardial infarction. According to the localization of the cancer, the old age, and the presence of comorbidities, we should recommend the insertion of a partially covered self-expanding metal stent as a reasonable palliative treatment in selected subjects with pseudoachalasia.
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PMID:Palliation with oesophageal metal stent of pseudoachalasia from gastric carcinoma at the cardia: a case report. 1974 78


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