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)

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

The authors report a case of Zenker's giant hypopharyngeal diverticulum in an elderly patient who underwent surgery due to the severity of symptoms. This diverticulum, which is both juxtasphincteric and epiphrenal, has a pulsion pathogenesis: the presence of a hernia on the esophageal side (jato?), with which Zenker's diverticulum is frequently associated and which is often followed by reflux esophagitis, is enough to cause motor asynchronism of the crico-pharyngeal muscle which, in the presence of hypertonic conditions during deglutition, leads to the formation of a high-pressure pouch which is then responsible for the formation of the diverticulum itself. It is therefore important to check whether an associated esophageal pathology exists once Zenker's diverticulum has been diagnosed: X-ray examinations of the upper digestive tract are undoubtedly capable of identifying the presence of the diverticulum as well as other pathological associations. In the present case it was not possible to perform a sufficiently exhaustive X-ray examination in order to exclude associated esophageal pathologies. Endoscopy may be superfluous and contraindicated in cases of large diverticular pouches. Symptoms vary depending on the size of the diverticulum. A feeling of dysphagia may precede the appearance of the diverticulum, even by several years, before the onset of symptoms related to the ingestion of food: initially the patient may experience the sensation of a foreign body while eating due to the accumulation of ingested food in the diverticulum; this is followed by halitosis, sialorrhea, noisy deglutition, regurgitation of undigested food especially during sleep, and frequently bronchopulmonary symptoms "ab ingestis".(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Zenker's diverticulum in the elderly. Description of a case and surgical treatment]. 128 56

Oropharyngeal disease is common in dogs and cats. Signs are seldom apparent to the owner until the disease is well advanced, and often are not specific for a particular disease. Signs include inappetence, pawing at the mouth, drooling of saliva, dysphagia, and halitosis. These signs can result from primary oral disease, or from effects of systemic or skin disease. Oral examination requires a cooperative patient; sedation may be necessary so that the entire oral cavity can be examined without causing the animal pain or risking injury to the examiner.
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PMID:Oral diseases and veterinary dentistry. 357 97

Zenker's diverticulum has been associated with a variety of symptoms such as dysphagia, regurgitation, aspiration, halitosis, and occasionally cough. In this case, a large Zenker's diverticulum containing a bezoar caused a persistent, debilitating cough presumably due to compression of adjacent neck structures.
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PMID:Zenker's bezoar. 759 81

Historically, the lingual tonsils are the most neglected members of Waldeyer's ring. They are often overlooked even in a thorough head and neck exam because of their anatomic location and the ambiguous constellation of symptoms which they produce when they are diseased or enlarged. The lingual tonsils have been reported to be associated with a variety of upper aerodigestive tract symptoms including odynophagia, dysphagia, otalgia, globus, halitosis, chronic cough, and dyspnea. Many patients with lingual tonsillar pathology may undergo extensive work-up for some of these non-specific upper airway complaints by their primary physician before referral to an otolaryngologist. Consequently, the diagnosis of lingual tonsillar disease requires a high index of suspicion and a thorough physical exam including evaluation of the tongue base and hypophaynx with indirect mirror or fiberoptic exam. In order to draw attention to this frequently unrecognized entity, we present a case report of a child with chronic cough resulting from lingual tonsillar hypertrophy.
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PMID:Lingual tonsillectomy for refractory paroxysmal cough. 1086 27

A 69-year-old man was referred to our department with an exorbitant foetor ex ore, dysphagia and dyspepsia. Upper endoscopy had been performed prior by an outpatient gastroenterologist and the patient had received an eradication therapy for a Helicobacter pylori-induced gastritis. At admission upper endoscopy showed a gastric ulcer which drained a stinking fluid. Endosonography, computed tomography and an upper gastrointestinal series with water soluble media revealed a gastrocolic fistula. Multiple biopsies showed a low-grade gastric MALT lymphoma. Therefore, a surgical reconstruction with Roux-en-Y esophagojejunostomy and transverso-descendostomy was performed. The histology of the completely removed stomach revealed a high-grade Non Hodgkin Lymphoma (NHL) with parts of a low-grade NHL. 3 weeks after surgery chemotherapy was started with the CHOP-regime which was well-tolerated by the patient.
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PMID:[Secondary high-grade MALT lymphoma of the stomach in a 69-year-old patient with gastrocolic fistula]. 1121 73

Twenty-four dogs and 30 cats with histopathologically confirmed salivary gland neoplasia were retrospectively reviewed in a multi-institutional study. The predominant presenting complaint for animals with salivary gland neoplasia was that of a mass being noted by the owner; other common complaints included halitosis, dysphagia, and exophthalmia. Siamese cats were overrepresented, indicating a possible breed predisposition. The most common histopathological type was simple adenocarcinoma. Cats had more advanced disease at diagnosis than did dogs, and clinical staging was prognostic in dogs. The median survival times for dogs and cats were 550 days and 516 days, respectively.
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PMID:Salivary gland neoplasia in the dog and cat: survival times and prognostic factors. 1156 48

Chondrosarcoma of the larynx is a rare slow-growing malignant tumour with approximately 240 cases reported in the literature: the cricoid cartilage is the most commonly affected site (72-75%), in rare case was described of epiglottis (1-2%). We report a case of a chondrosarcoma of the epiglottis treated with CO2 laser epiglottectomy. The patient was referred with dysphonia, dysphagia and halitosis that started four months before. Indirect laryngoscopy revealed a large smooth mass with a roundish appearance and a pearly-grey colour, as big as a nut, apparently arising from the laryngeal surface of the epiglottis, causing obliteration of the piriform fossa. The definitive histopathological report showed microscopically, the tumour was low-grade (grade I) chondrosarcoma. A literature review regarding chondrosarcomas of the epiglottis is presented. The diagnosis, histology and treatment of these tumours are discussed. In particular we examine the controversy of conservative surgery vs. total laryngectomy. A conservative surgical approach is typically appropriate in light of this tumour's low-aggressive nature.
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PMID:Chondrosarcoma of the epiglottis: report of a case treated with CO2 laser epiglottectomy. 1551 40

Adenotonsillectomy is one of the most commonly performed surgeries in the pediatric and young adult populations. The postoperative morbidity of this surgical procedure is often significant, including odynophagia, dysphagia, fever, halitosis, loss of weight and reduced oral intake. After tonsillectomy, with or without adenoidectomy, the colonization of the open tonsillar fossae by the bacterial population of the oral cavity would cause an exacerbation of the local inflammatory response worsening postoperative pain. The hypothesis that a reduction of the bacterial population of an open surgical wound could minimize the local inflammation, stimulate the healing process and hasten recovery triggered a considerable number of studies addressing the relation between the use of perioperative antibiotics and postoperative morbidity of adenotonsillectomy. In spite of the fact that those studies claim to perform an assessment of the surgical prophylactic use of antibiotics, their outline is not in compliance with the worldwide-accepted principles of surgical antibiotic prophylaxis. By performing a critical review of the literature, the authors discuss the advantages and disadvantages of using antibiotics in tonsillectomies or adenotonsillectomies, as well as the most appropriate definition for its utilization.
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PMID:Antibiotic use in tonsillectomies: therapeutic or prophylactic? Required or excessive? 1661 33

The history, clinical signs, results of diagnostic imaging, treatment methods and outcome of 16 adult horses with a metallic foreign body in the tongue are reviewed. All the horses had a swollen tongue, they salivated excessively and were partially to completely anorexic. Less common clinical signs were fever, an enlarged and painful intermandibular space, dysphagia, unilateral tongue paralysis and halitosis. Most of the horses had shown clinical signs for less than 24 hours. The foreign bodies were diagnosed by oral examination, radiography and ultrasonography; they were removed from the tongue of four of the horses during the initial oral examination, and were removed surgically from nine others; the other three horses were treated medically without attempts being made to extract the foreign bodies. Twelve of the bodies were small pieces of wire and one was a hypodermic needle. All the horses received a combination of antimicrobial and non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs and they all made an uneventful recovery. Feeding hay and the use of cable-framed tractor tyres as feeders were commonly associated with the cases.
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PMID:Metallic foreign bodies in the tongues of 16 horses. 1702 50


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