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Query: UMLS:C0011168 (
dysphagia
)
15,644
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
This study investigated the frequency and severity of symptoms during naturally occurring panic attacks recollected as "usual" and during sodium lactate-induced attacks. Seventy-six male and 126 female patients with panic disorder or agoraphobics with panic attack (DSM-III criteria) underwent lactate infusion studies and were serially administered the Acute Panic Inventory (API). Fifty-nine percent of the subjects were rated by an attending psychiatrist to have experienced lactate-induced panic attacks. Patients were also asked to API symptom rate their "usual" panic attacks. For panic recollected as usual, the most frequently reported symptoms (> or = 75%) at the moderate to severe levels included: afraid in general, difficulty concentrating, difficulty performing a job, desire to flee, afraid of losing control, palpitations, feeling hot or cold or both, dyspnea, dizzy-lightheaded. During lactate infusion, 25 of 29 API symptoms increased significantly from prelactate to point of panic; however, particularly robust effect sizes were exhibited for the desire to flee, dyspnea, tingling, twitching/trembling and difficulty doing a job. Comparison of panic recollected as usual and lactate-induced panic showed that more than half of the symptoms did not differ after Bonferroni correction; however, the most notable were fear in general, dyspnea, chest pain/
discomfort
,
difficulty swallowing
, feeling weak, desire to flee, and feeling hot/cold or both. These data point to a very distinctive role during both recollected and lactate-induced panic attacks for fearfulness the desire to flee (by definition), and for dyspnea, difficulty performing a job and fear of losing control. During lactate-induced panic, dyspnea exhibited the most robust effect size of all physical symptoms.
...
PMID:Consistencies between recalled panic and lactate-induced panic. 916 May 44
We assessed the accuracy of patient localization of the site of
dysphagia
and its implications for radiological practice during the barium swallow examination. Several current texts dispute the value of such information. Fifty-two consecutive patients with
dysphagia
were asked to localize the site of
discomfort
on the skin surface. The ability of each patient to do so precisely or vaguely was noted. A detailed barium examination of the pharynx, esophagus and stomach was performed. Results suggested that patients who had symptoms more cranial than the sternal notch were highly accurate at localizing disease. Localization became less precise as symptoms moved caudally towards the epigastrium. Lateralization of symptoms was highly accurate in determining the site of pathology. In conclusion, we feel that in certain circumstances the barium examination can be usefully tailored to accelerate examination times, thus reducing radiation exposure and cost whilst improving diagnostic accuracy.
...
PMID:Patient perception and localization of dysphagia -- barium study correlation. 928 82
Twenty-two patients (mean age = 67.9 years) with oculopharyngeal muscular dystrophy (OPMD) were referred for
dysphagia
from 1987 to January 1995. Six patients had suffered aspiration pneumonia, and three had significantly lost weight, while 19 complained of
discomfort
during swallowing but without weight loss. Swallowing was assessed by fiberscopy during swallowing (last eight patients), videofluoroscopy (12 cases) and manometry (19 cases). Twelve patients underwent a cricopharyngeal (CP) myotomy: 10 showed improvement, one had a partial improvement, and the procedure failed in one (mean follow-up = 29.6 months). In the other cases, CP myotomy was postponed, refused or contraindicated. Of the 22 patients, three died from OPMD consequences. Factors associated with favorable outcome were adequate residual pharyngeal propulsion and no weight loss. In a majority of cases, CP myotomy constitutes an effective treatment of
dysphagia
with adequate residual propulsion but does not modify the final prognosis and is contraindicated in cases with pharyngeal aperistalsis.
...
PMID:Dysphagia in oculopharyngeal muscular dystrophy: a series of 22 French cases. 939 25
During a four-year period, 308 patients presented following ingestion of foreign bodies. Ingestion was accidental in 272 cases (88.3%) and deliberate in the remainder. Symptoms at presentation included
dysphagia
, odynophagia, nausea and vomiting, chest pain and pharyngeal
discomfort
. Sixty-eight patients were asymptomatic. A policy of expectant management and selective endoscopy was employed. Following initial assessment 202 patients (65.6%) were discharged without treatment, 30 (9.7%) of whom were later reviewed as outpatients and did not require admission. Forty-nine patients (16%) were admitted for treatment; 27 had oesophagoscopy, five bronchoscopy and two had foreign body extraction with direct laryngoscopy. In nine patients who were endoscoped, no foreign body was identified. Twenty-seven others were referred to the otorhinolaryngology service in another hospital. There were no deaths in the group and morbidity was 1.2%. We conclude that a policy of selective endoscopy is safe and effective in the management of patients following ingestion of foreign bodies.
...
PMID:Selective endoscopy in management of ingested foreign bodies of the upper gastrointestinal tract: is it safe? 948 86
Post-tonsillectomy bacteremia is a well-recognized aetiological factor in streptococcal endocarditis, and prophylactic penicillin has been recommended to reduce its incidence in susceptible patients undergoing tonsillectomy. Recent studies have shown a change in the microflora and an increase in the number of penicillin-resistant organisms in the tonsils of patients undergoing tonsillectomy. The aim of this study was to assess the incidence of post-tonsillectomy bacteraemia, to identify the micro-organisms associated with it and to review the suitability of penicillin in prophylactic regimens. The relationship between positive blood cultures and several clinical parameters such as fever, vomiting, pharyngeal
discomfort
, or
dysphagia
was also analysed. Of the 102 patients included in the study, 41 (40.1%) had positive post-tonsillectomy blood cultures. Haemophilus influenzae were isolated from 23 (56%) of the positive cultures and Streptococcus viridans in 15 (36.5%). Twenty-five per cent of H. influenzae produced beta-lactamase and only 30% of streptococci of the viridans group were penicillin-sensitive. Positivity of the blood cultures was not related to fever,
discomfort
, surgical technique, type of tonsil, or any of the parameters studied. Bacteraemia seems to be related to traction of the tonsil before dissection rather than direct spread of bacteria into the opened vessels. Using a beta-lactamase stable antibiotic instead of penicillin for prophylaxis would be more appropriate.
...
PMID:Bacteraemia during tonsillectomy: a study of the factors involved and clinical implications. 956 68
In order to evaluate complications due to cervical spine surgery using the anterior cervical approach a prospective study was conducted on 125 patients. ENT examination with the fibroscope was employed for all the patients before the procedure. The patients were operated on under general anesthesia and were intubated with an armoured tube, and then were placed in an intensive care unit for 24 hours. Assessment of deglutition and an ENT examination were performed the day after surgery. Before surgery, two cases of vocal cord paralysis were noted. 111 patients (88.8%) presented with subjective disorders: problems such as sore throat, odynophagia,
dysphagia
,
dysphagia
with overspill and hoarseness were respectively noted in 55 (44%), 34 (27.2%), 32 (25.6%), 11 (8.8%) and 13 (10.4%) cases. Dyspnoea was found in 2 cases (1.6%). 117 patients (93.6%) presented postoperative anomalies which were found on the posterolateral pharyngeal wall, on the arytenoids and on posterior third of the vocal cords. Inflammatory and/or swollen lesions were slight, moderate, significant or very significant in respectively 22.4%, 22.4%, 15.2% and 1.6% of cases. Very significant circumferential swelling of the pharyngeal wall and of the arytenoids was responsible for two cases of respiratory distress, and the patients required reintubation and return to theatre. Severe pharyngeal lesion correlated with duration of surgery (r = 0.20; p < 0.05), with the number levels of fusion (r = 0.02; p < 0.02) and with the age of the patient (p < 0.02). Six patients presented problems of mobility of the vocal cords: 3 had a right vocal cord paresis which was temporary and 3 had paralysis, also on the right but which persisted. There were no other complications. It is concluded that (i) ENT complications are frequently found in postoperative cervical spine surgery using the anterior cervical approach, some of them being severe. An ENT examination must be performed before the procedure for legal reasons. It is also recommended in the postoperative period in the case of
discomfort
; (ii) patients need to be placed in an intensive care unit during for the first 24 hours (iii). This study needs to be attended over more patients (iv) comparison with a control group of patients having non cervical surgery and intubated in the same way is needed to differentiate lesions related to surgery or intubation.
...
PMID:[A prospective study of ENT complication following surgery of the cervical spine by the anterior approach (preliminary results)]. 977 50
A 60-year-old man was admitted to a hospital for evaluation of intermittent fever,
dysphagia
, hoarseness, and general chest
discomfort
. Great vessel mycotic aneurysm was suspected when antibiotic trials failed and chest X-ray showed paraaortic mass with pleural effusion mimicking mediastinitis. Although the correct diagnosis of mycotic aneurysm of innominate artery was made thereafter and vigorous treatment was initiated immediately, this patient succumbed to overwhelming sepsis, probably due to a 2-week delay in another hospital. This case is reported to remind readers of the possibility of this unusual location of mycotic aneurysm. A high index of suspicion should be maintained to make an earlier diagnosis and obtain better prognosis. Computed tomography and 3D magnetic resonance angiography also significantly improve the diagnosis when mycotic aneurysm location is unusual and presentation is equivocal.
...
PMID:Subclavian mycotic aneurysm presenting as mediastinal abscess. 982 58
A case of a primary esophageal pseudosarcoma associated with an independent type 3 tumor is described herein. A 60-year-old male presented with
dysphagia
and chest
discomfort
. A clinical evaluation revealed a type 3 tumor in the middle of the esophagus, which was diagnosed after a biopsy to be squamous cell carcinoma (SCC). A subsequent gross examination of the subtotally removed esophagus revealed a polypoid tumor adjacent to the type 3 tumor. Histologically, the polypoid mass was composed of SCC and mesenchymal components without a transitional zone. The tumor was thus classified as a pseudosarcoma of the esophagus, and was unique in that this appeared to have developed independently from the SCC.
...
PMID:A case of pseudosarcoma associated with type 3 squamous cell carcinoma of the esophagus: report of a case. 1048 56
Esophageal ulceration with fistula is an uncommon manifestation of Crohn's disease. Typical presentation of symptomatic esophageal Crohn's disease may include
dysphagia
, odynophagia, weight loss, and chest
discomfort
. We present a patient with severe esophageal and skin involvement of Crohn's disease that was progressive despite conventional therapy including prednisone and 6-mercaptopurine. The diagnosis of Crohn's was based on the presence of typical clinical, endoscopic, and pathologic findings, including granulomas in the skin ulcer and the absence of infectious etiologies. The patient had a nearly complete resolution of her esophageal disease with a single infusion of infliximab.
...
PMID:Treatment of severe esophageal Crohn's disease with infliximab. 1057 21
We assessed the safety of a new office or bedside method of evaluating both the motor and sensory components of swallowing called flexible endoscopic evaluation of swallowing with sensory testing (FEESST). FEESST combines the established endoscopic evaluation of swallowing with a technique that determines laryngopharyngeal sensory discrimination thresholds by endoscopically delivering air-pulse stimuli to the mucosa innervated by the superior laryngeal nerve. Endoscopic assessment of laryngopharyngeal sensory capacity followed by endoscopic visualization of deglutition was prospectively performed 500 times in 253 patients with
dysphagia
over a 2.5-year period in a tertiary care center. The patients had a variety of underlying diagnoses, with stroke and chronic neurological disease predominating (n = 155). To determine the safety of FEESST, the presence of epistaxis, airway compromise, and significant changes in heart rate before and after the evaluation were assessed. Patients were also asked to rate the level of
discomfort
of the examination; 498 evaluations were completed. There were three instances of epistaxis that were self-limited. There were no cases of airway compromise. There were no significant differences in heart rate between pre- and posttest measurements (p > 0.05). Eighty-one percent of patients noted either no
discomfort
or mild
discomfort
as a result of the examination. In conclusion, FEESST is a safe method of evaluating
dysphagia
in the tertiary care setting and may also have application for the chronic care setting.
Dysphagia
2000
PMID:The safety of flexible endoscopic evaluation of swallowing with sensory testing (FEESST): an analysis of 500 consecutive evaluations. 1059 57
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