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)

Dysphagia is often present early, with varying degrees of involvement, in patients with myasthenia gravis. Twenty-five patients with a clinical status of myasthenia gravis were graded according to a modified Osserman classification and the esophageal manometric results were reported according to their clinical status. The results were also compared with those in 20 normal control subjects. Twenty-four patients (96%) had abnormal motility. The only patient who was in class I had a normal tracing. There was no significant difference in function of the lower esophageal sphincter, but a significant decrease in mean amplitude (15.1 +/- 6.1 versus 29.7 +/- 4.7 mm Hg) and a prolongation in mean duration of the peristaltic wave (7.4 +/- 2.8 versus 4.5 +/- 0.2 seconds) was noted in the upper esophagus. The cricopharyngeal sphincter pressure also showed a significant decrease (23.4 +/- 9.5 versus 43.1 +/- 3.1 mm Hg), but relaxation and coordination were good. The mean amplitudes, mean duration of peristaltic waves, and cricopharyngeal pressures between the myasthenic and control populations were statistically significant, with a p value of 0.001. Besides this, frequent spontaneous contractions, simultaneous contractions, and biphasic repetitive contractions typical of peristaltic dysfunction were also found in myasthenic patients. Motor dysfunction of the esophagus as assessed by manometric study correlates well with Osserman's modified clinical classification.
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PMID:Esophageal manometric studies in patients with myasthenia gravis. 333 94

Dysphagia and/or chest pain are the symptoms that characterize the motor abnormalities of the esophagus. These symptoms are not specific for motor disorders and can be seen with mucosal lesions. Symptom varies in severity and can be severe enough to put in risk the patient life. Motor dysfunction of the esophagus can be idiopathic, when it is not related to another systemic disease, or secondary, when it is associated to a generalized disease. Diagnosis and characterization of the motor disorders of the esophagus are best performed by manometry. In the present work, we expose some of the relevant clinical aspects and the manometric criteria currently accepted to classify motility disorders. Some treatment aspects are also reviewed.
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PMID:[Motor disorders of the smooth muscle of the esophagus]. 799 74

Motor dysfunction is an important cause of oropharyngeal dysphagia and distal esophageal symptoms. Minimally invasive surgical methods of managing Zenker diverticula and achalasia, important disorders associated with these presentations, continue to take center stage in the literature. Detection and characterization of hypomotility before antireflux surgery may be less important than systematically excluding achalasia, as the vague and variable presentations of this motor disorder become appreciated. The many processes that can mimic idiopathic achalasia continue to be exposed.
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PMID:Esophageal motor disorders. 1570 81

Motor dysfunction is responsible for symptomatic illnesses both in the proximal skeletal muscle region and in the distal smooth muscle esophagus. Practical methods for diagnosing and treating oropharyngeal dysphagia continue to reach consensus. Achalasia, the most significant of the distal motor disorders, is of investigative interest because of the expanded armamentarium of treatment options. Minimally invasive surgical methods have taken an important foothold as a primary treatment of this disorder. Appreciation is growing for sensory dysfunction that accompanies distal motor disorders. Such dysfunction may help explain the observed discrepancies between symptoms and measurable motility abnormality.
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PMID:Esophageal motor disorders. 1703 Nov 2