Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0011168 (dysphagia)
15,644 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A prospective study of 595 patients treated by the Thoracic Surgical Unit (TSU) at the University College Hospital (UCH), Ibadan between July 1975 and December 1977 was carried out to determine the pattern of thoracic surgical diseases in Nigeria and to prove or disprove the rarity of certain cardiopulmonary diseases in tropical Africa. This review shows that pyogenic infections of the lung and pleura constitute the largest percentage (38.5) of the thoracic surgical diseases in Nigeria. Although pulmonary tuberculosis accounts for only 23.4 percent of our total inpatient load, it constitutes about 60 percent of our outpatient clinic practice. Cardiovascular diseases form 12.9 percent, notably congenital and acquired valvular heart diseases. An interesting finding was the occasional association of pyomyositis with pyogenic pericarditis and empyema thoracis. This triad is being investigated. Chest trauma was the most common thoracic surgical emergency accounting for 9.2 percent of the total thoracic surgical pathology. The most common causes of dysphagia are strictures from corrosive esophagitis, achalasia, and carcinoma of the esophagus. Present experience confirms the rarity of hiatus hernia, reflux esophagitis, atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease, and, perhaps, carcinoma of the lung among Nigerians.
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PMID:Pattern of thoracic surgical diseases in Nigeria: experience at the University College Hospital, Ibadan. 70 99

Twenty-six cases of leiomyoma of the esophagus, presenting at four centers of Thoracic Surgery were reviewed. Dysphagia was a presenting symptom in 42% but was the only symptom in 15%. Sixty-two percent of patients presented with dyspepsia and 50% had other upper gastro-intestinal tract disorders. Half the lesions were identified correctly on contrast radiography and seen at endoscopy. Tumors were more or less equally found in the lower and middle thirds of the esophagus and varied in size from 2 cm to 13 cm in diameter. All were removed, 88% by enucleation, but the 3 patients who had esophageal resection all developed postoperative reflux esophagitis. Leiomyomas may cause no important symptoms and do not always cause dysphagia even when large. If treated, they should be enucleated.
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PMID:Leiomyoma of the esophagus. 242 36

The patient was a 65-year-old male who came to our hospital with a complaint of dysphagia. He was admitted to hospital following a diagnosis of combined tumor in the esophagus and stomach as revealed by X-ray fluoroscopy. For preoperative chemotherapy, he was given oral administration of BLM-polyacrylate pasta, 30 mg/day for 25 days and 15 mg/day for 5 days, up to a total dose of 825 mg. This regimen successfully reduced the tumor in the esophageal area. No signs of pulmonary dysfunction, changes in blood cell count and blood chemistry of any other abnormalities in his general status were seen as side-effects of the BLM-polyacrylate pasta. Thoracic-esophagectomy and total gastrectomy were performed on November 7, 1983. He has been maintaining a good quality of life without any signs of recurrence of the tumor for the last two years and six months after the operation. The esophageal tumor was identified as moderately differentiated squamous cell carcinoma with A0N0M0Pl0 and grade of invasion "mp", while the gastric tumor was moderately differentiated adenocarcinoma with H0P0S0N0 and invasion grade "m" in the early stage of IIa + IIc type.
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PMID:[A case report of concurrent esophageal and gastric double cancer successfully treated by surgery and the effectiveness of the oral administration of polyacrylate pasta (PANA kayaku) and bleomycin oil in esophageal carcinoma]. 243 May 26

Clinical signs of esophageal hiatal hernia in four dogs and one cat included regurgitation, vomiting, hematemesis, hypersalivation, dysphagia, and dyspnea. Thoracic radiographs, esophagram, and fluoroscopy were used to demonstrate cranial displacement of the esophagogastric junction and part of the stomach through the esophageal hiatus. Other findings included megaesophagus, esophageal hypomotility, gastroesophageal reflux, and pneumonia. Medical therapy failed to resolve the clinical signs. Reduction in size of the esophageal hiatus, fixation of the esophagus to the diaphragmatic crus (esophagopexy), and a left fundic gastropexy were performed. Surgical results were considered good to excellent.
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PMID:Hiatal hernia repair by restoration and stabilization of normal anatomy. An evaluation in four dogs and one cat. 281 56

Twelve patients with oesophageal smooth muscle tumour were operated on between 1955 and 1984 in the Department of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery of Helsinki University Central Hospital. Eleven tumours were leiomyomata, the twelfth was a leiomyosarcoma. Dysphagia (83%) and chest or epigastric pains (67%) were the most common symptoms presented. All patients underwent transthoracic removal of the tumour. Complications of the surgery included two cases of postoperative oesophageal fistula; in both instances the lumen of the oesophagus had been entered during the extirpation of the tumour. The surgery was effective in eliminating the most prominent symptom, i.e. dysphagia. However, follow-up examinations 11.1 +/- 6.8 (SD) years later revealed reflux symptoms and endoscopically and histologically verified oesophagitis in seven of the nine (78%) surviving patients. Additionally, two of them had developed Barrett's oesophagus, 10 and 19 years, respectively, after the primary surgery. These two patients underwent subsequent transabdominal antireflux procedures (Nissen fundoplication). We conclude that long-term follow-up of patients who have been treated for benign oesophageal tumour is indicated.
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PMID:Smooth muscle tumours of the oesophagus. 358 96

Fifteen cases of gunshot wounds of the esophagus seen between the years 1970 and 1978 were reviewed, eight involving the cervical esophagus and seven involving the thoracic portion. Most common symptoms were pain, neck tenderness, dyspnea, and dysphagia. Signs observed were subcutaneous emphysema, crepitations, fever, and leukocytosis. Plain X-rays showed pneumomediastinum, hydrothorax, and pneumothorax. Perforations were confirmed by barium studies in 12 patients. Injuries in the cervical portion were treated by prompt exploration, closure of the defect, and drainage. There were no deaths in this group. Thoracic injuries were treated by prompt thoracotomy except in one patient, for whom the diagnosis was not made until 22 hours after the injury; his was the only death in this series. Because of the extensive tissue involvement in gunshot wounds, primary repairs of thoracic esophageal perforations have a high incidence of failure. Defunctionalization of the esophagus, through ligation of the distal esophagus, gastrostomy, and cervical esophagostomy, has provided a safer method. Use of a double strand of absorbable Dexon to ligate the distal esophagus made a second thoracotomy for removal of the ligature unnecessary. We have adopted routine use of hyperalimentation, avoiding the need for feeding jejunostomy.
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PMID:Perforations of the esophagus from gunshot wounds. 670 55

Primary small-cell cancer of the esophagus is a rare tumor that disseminates early with a uniformly poor prognosis if untreated. Sixteen patients with malignant dysphagia referred to the Thoracic Surgical Unit, City Hospital, Edinburgh, within a 10-year period had a diagnosis of primary small-cell cancer of the esophagus. Seven patients underwent subtotal esophagectomy or esophagogastrectomy, either alone or with adjuvant chemotherapy or radiotherapy, with a mean survival of 20 months (standard deviation 35.4 months, range 2 weeks to 96 months). The remaining nine patients had disseminated disease when they were first seen and were treated symptomatically by intubation alone (1 patient), intubation and palliative chemotherapy or radiotherapy (3 patients), palliative chemotherapy (2 patients), palliative radiotherapy (1 patient), or no therapy (2 patients), with a mean survival of 4.8 months (standard deviation 2.6 months, range 2 to 9 months). Patients seen with this aggressive tumor should be assessed urgently for evidence of metastatic spread and then offered resection in combination with chemotherapy if they are otherwise fit for operation. This treatment regimen has given us one long-term survivor (96 months) who, we believe, is the only patient to have been cured of this condition. Patients seen with disseminated disease should have symptomatic treatment of the dysphagia combined with palliative chemotherapy.
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PMID:Primary small-cell cancer of the esophagus. 753 97

The Authors report their experience in the endoscopic treatment using pneumatic dilatation for 18 patients with achalasia, seen in the period January 1992 August 1995 at the Laboratory of Digestive Endoscopy of the Institute of General Thoracic and Vascular Surgery of the University of Parma. Ten were males and 8 females, age range 23-79 years (average age 48 yrs.). The most common symptoms was dysphagia, all patients were radiologically and manometrically studied confirming the clinical and endoscopic diagnosis. All underwent pneumatic dilatation under endoscopic control. In all, 36 dilations were carried out without registering complications related to the method. A maximum follow-up of 30 months confirmed a good-excellent outcome in 89% of cases. In 3 cases a gastroesophageal reflux symptomatology was registered, but successfully treated medically. The Authors conclude that the pneumatic dilation for achalasia is to be considered the treatment of choice, leaving the surgical approach only for cases resistant to such treatment.
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PMID:[Conservative endoscopic treatment for achalasia of the esophagus. Our experience]. 892 91

We report the case of a 72-year-old woman hospitalized for dysphagia and odynophagia due to an ulcer of the esophagus. Thoracic CT-scan and esophageal endosonography revealed a tumour of the mediastinum which invaded the esophagus. Per-operative biopsies concluded to a probable malignant fibrous histiocytoma.
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PMID:[Ulcer of the esophagus disclosing probable malignant histiocytofibroma of the posterior mediastinum]. 920 19

A 52-year-old woman was hospitalized because of dyspnea and dysphagia. Thoracic computed tomography revealed a retrotracheal mass. Tc-99m pertechnetate scintigraphy showed intense accumulation of radioactivity corresponding to the mediastinal mass detected by computed tomography. Repeated Tc-99m pertechnetate scintigraphy performed after oral administration of potassium perchlorate (KCLO4) revealed complete disappearance of the radioactive accumulation in the mediastinum, suggesting that the retrotracheal mass was a retrosternal goiter. Subsequent surgical removal and analysis of the mass showed it was indeed a retrosternal goiter. This case highlights the importance of Tc-99m pertechnetate thyroid scintigraphy with and without KCLO4 administration as a simple, accurate, and cost-effective imaging method to diagnose retrosternal goiter.
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PMID:Tc-99m pertechnetate scintigraphy before and after potassium perchlorate administration for the diagnosis of retrosternal goiter. 1083 97


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