Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0011168 (
dysphagia
)
15,644
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
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
Oral ulcers
have may possible causes, including immunosuppression and drug therapy. Severe cases of oral ulceration merit special consideration because the ulcers may become large enough to alter the quality of life of the patient. The present case involves a male patient who in 1994 received an orthotopic liver transplantation because of alcoholic cirrhosis. The initial immunosuppressive regimen was induced with tacrolimus (4 mg/d) and prednisone (20 mg/d). Ten months after orthotopic liver transplantation, the patient complained of multiple recurrent oral ulcers,
dysphagia
, and severe oral pain, which did not respond to any of the treatments over a 3-year period. Approximately 3(1/4) years after these unresponsive ulcers appeared, the reduction of the oral dosage of tacrolimus resulted in the total remission of the ulcers. A retrospective analysis demonstrated that appearance of the ulcers coincided with a dose of 9 mg/d of tacrolimus (whole blood levels of 12 ng/mL); the ulcers did not disappear until the dose was reduced to 4 mg/d (whole blood level of 6.6 ng/mL).
...
PMID:Resolution of oral ulcerations after decreasing the dosage of tacrolimus in a liver transplantation recipient. 1170 89