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

Twenty-nine patients who underwent Nissen fundoplication for the treatment of symptomatic, sliding, esophageal hiatal hernia are reported. Fourteen of these patients also underwent parietal cell vagotomy (PCV) without a drainage procedure. Simulatenous cineradiography and manometric studies, esophagoscopy and gastric analysis were performed pre- and postoperatively. Esophageal acid clearing and pH reflux studies were performed postoperatively. All but 3 patients had reflux and/or esophagitis preoperatively. Cineradiography and the pH reflux test were the most reliable tests for diagnosis of reflux. There was no operative mortality. The mean followup period was 20 months. Dysphagia occurred in 5 patients. Correction of dysphagia in one patient required operation. The dysphagia in the remaining patients was temporary and mild, responding to dilatation. Two patients had mild diarrhea. One patient who had had a previous gastric resection developed severe diarrhea after bilateral truncal vagotomy. No patient developed the "bloat syndrome". A close correlation did not exist between reflux and preoperative sphincter pressure. The mean LES pressure increased 10 mmH2O postoperatively and the two patients with persistent reflux postoperatively had normal LES pressure. Correction of reflux after Nissen fundoplication is probably due to some mechanism other than increased LES pressure. Recurrent or persistent hiatal hernia was diagnosed in 4 patients by cineradiography. Two of these patients had reflux but only the patient who had undergone PCV was without symptoms or esophagitis. The technical performance of the Nissen hiatal hernia repair was greatly facilitat ed by PCV. This procedure also provided adequate treatment for patients with concomitant duodenal ulcer disease. PCV, unaccompanied by a drainage procedure, was not associated with increased morbidity, mortality or the adverse effects usually attributed to vagotomy. In the event of recurrent hernia and reflux, PCV may prevent the development of esophagitis.
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PMID:Evaluation of the Nissen fundoplication for treatment of hiatal hernia: use of parietal cell vagotomy without drainage as an adjunctive procedure. 23 37

Functional disroders are the most important cause for complaints in the gastrointestinal tract. Dysfunction may concern one or more physiologic properties like tonus, motility, secretion, sometimes also resorption and digestion, or their interaction. Functional disorders of the esophagus (esophagospasm and achalasia) become manifest as dysphagia. Halitosis, bad taste, burning tongue, and flatulent abdomen are frequent symptoms of functional disorders of the gastrointestinal tract. Irritable bowel syndrome is probably the functional disorder most freqently found in the gastrointestinal tract. Characteristic symptoms are pain in the lower and upper middle abdominal region, obstipation and/or diarrhea, flatulent abdomen, mucous discharge with the stools and urgent defecation with cramps relieved after discharge. Prognosis quoad vitam is good, the course, however, is subject to many changes. Therapie is symptomatic. Diagnostic and psychotherapeutic measures are intended to help remove carcinophobia and to overcome conflicts and fears.
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PMID:[Functional disorders of the gastrointestinal tract (author's transl)]. 68 14

Most operations performed for peptic ulcer disease in the United States include vagotomy as part of the surgical procedure. This paper reviews the complications associated specifically with or increased in frequency and severity by this procedure. Included in this review are technical complications, gastric retention, recurrent ulceration, postvagotomy diarrhea, postvagotomy dysphagia and achalasia, postvagotomy biliary disease and nutritional problems. The frequency of these complications, their pathophysiology and therapeutic modalities available are reviewed. The main emphasis is on postvagotomy syndrome that can be treated medically and on the various treatment forms that have been suggested.
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PMID:Complications of vagotomy. 69 13

Hiatus hernia and peptic esophagitis in children lead in 20% of the cases to peptic stenosis, thus rendering a reflux-preventing operation mandatory in many patients. We consider fundoplication as the operation of choice and have used it for 17 years. The early and late mortality varies between 1.2% and 1.4% and can be lowered even further through improvement of treatment. Functional complications such as "gas bloat syndrome," dysphagia, diarrhea, disappear spontaneously in the first 2-3 months after surgery. The only severe late complication is the development of a paraesophageal hernia months after surgery: This complication can be avoided through better technique. Out of 61 patients who were examined 10 or more years after operation, 58 are totally free of symptoms.
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PMID:[Reflux esophagitis: operative procedures in children: fundoplication (author's transl)]. 73 34

As various chemotherapeutic agents are added to treatment routines, the possibility of adverse effects is appreciably increased, particularly in those organs for which the agents have specific toxicity. Symptoms most commonly associated with radiation sickness, such as malaise, anorexia, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, dysphagia, dermatitis, and depleted hemopoietic elements, are usually seen late in the course of radiation therapy or shortly thereafter. Consequently, they are managed by the physician in charge of radiation or the patient's referring physician. The general physician may be concerned with symptoms arising from delayed organ pathology. These symptoms may arise in many tissues that are still considered somewhat radioresistant, but secondary to sequelae arising because of connective tissue changes from obliterative narrowing of the finer vasculature. Radiation may be only one of several possible causes, and the symptoms of sequelae may appear only after a long latent period, so that the previous radiation may not be considered in the differential diagnosis unless a detailed history is taken. The medical management of these sequelae is, in general, similar to that used for the pathology produced in these organs by other agents.
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PMID:Sequelae of abdominal radiation and their medical management. 83 56

Of the 194 fundoplications for hiatus hernia published by the authors at an earlier date, 66 were done before 1965 and 61 were available for an evaluation of the results after 10 years. Clinical results are good, 58 patients being free of symptoms. Only 3 complained of diarrhea or slight dysphagia. The radiological check up was ideal in 59 cases. 2 patients showed an "en bloc" herniation, but the fundoplication worked still very well as a reflux-preventive mechanism. 40 patients were no'longer able to vomit, a fact that has been suspected by other authors. Only 14 of them resented this as an inconvenience.
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PMID:Fundoplication in hiatal hernia--results after 10 years. 86 79

Seventy-five patients underwent a 90 percent distal gastric bypass for morbid obesity. The average weight was 121.4 kilogram, height 164 centimeters, and age 31.4 years in these 70 women and five men. There was a total of 20 surgical complications in the 75 patients, with wound infection being the most common. Sixteen chronic complications were noted and consisted of vomiting, diarrhea, reflux esophagitis, dysphagia, and vitamin deficiencies. None of the above complications were life-threatening or required dismantling of the bypass. Of 54 patients followed for 12 months or more after gastric bypass, there was a 24.5 percent average weight decrease at 6 months, and this progressed to 35.8 percent by 12 months. Fifty-two patients undergoing small bowel bypass previously at the same institution had a 25.4 percent weight reduction at 12 months. Of 54 patients, 83 percent followed for one or more years after gastric bypass have had an excellent or good clinical result, whereas only 42 percent of the 52 patients undergoing small bowel bypass have had an excellent or good clinical result with the same criteria. It is concluded that the Mason 90 percent distal gastric bypass is a suitable form of surgical treatment for the morbidity obese patient who cannot lose weight by dietary measures.
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PMID:Gastric bypass for morbid obesity: results and complications. 96 34

The gastrointestinal complications of diabetes mellitus are the outward forms of the diabetic visceral neuropathy. The diabetic damage of the vagus nerve leads to disturbances of the tonus and the motility resembling to postvagotomy like conditions in the following clinical forms: diabetic dysphagia, diabetic gastroparesis, diabetic diarrhoea, diabetic megacolon, diabetic cholecystomegaly. These are in general late complications of labile diabetes. The mild abdominal symptoms are not in proportion to the severe radiological changes, proper diagnosis may be obtained only by means of roentgenological examinations in most cases.
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PMID:[Gastrointestinal complications of diabetes mellitus]. 117 96

The correlation of gastrointestinal symptoms and infections in 186 consecutive patients with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection undergoing diagnostic endoscopy (oesophagogastroduodenoscopy, n = 124; colonoscopy, n = 37; both, n = 25) was investigated. Biopsy and stool samples were examined for infective agents. Only weight loss (p = 0.003) and dysphagia (p = 0.027) were more common in patients at stage CDC IV compared with earlier stages. In three of 27 patients at stage II/III and in 93 of 159 patients at stage IV an infective agent was identified in stool or gastrointestinal biopsy specimen (p < 0.001). Cytomegalovirus (n = 35), Candida sp (n = 28), M avium complex (n = 10), and Cryptosporidium (eight) were the most frequent agents detected. At stage IV, diarrhoea was more frequent in infected compared with non-infected patients (p = 0.006); however, an infective agent was also found in 39 of 82 patients at stage IV without diarrhoea. The frequency of gastrointestinal symptoms was not consistently increased in patients harbouring specific infective agents compared with non-infected patients. Our findings indicate that the pathogenic relevance of a gastrointestinal infection in HIV infected patients has to be verified and indirectly support the existence of an HIV associated enteropathy.
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PMID:Gastrointestinal symptoms in patients infected with human immunodeficiency virus: relevance of infective agents isolated from gastrointestinal tract. 132 82

More than 50% of all HIV-infected patients have gastrointestinal symptoms like dysphagia, abdominal pain, diarrhea or intestinal bleeding. We describe an emergency situation with gross gastrointestinal bleeding in a twenty-seven year old drug addicted female. Colonoscopy and histological examination of the biopsies were the main diagnostic procedure to locate an extrapulmonary manifestation of a mycobacterium-tuberculosis-infection.
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PMID:[Primary intestinal tuberculosis in AIDS]. 148 54


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