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)

This study was performed to develop a system to measure dysphagia in an objective fashion, test its correlation with subjective estimates of dysphagia, and encourage the use of a standardized measure of esophageal stenosis. Thirty-five patients with mechanical dysphagia underwent subjective estimates of dysphagia using a dysphagia scale graded from 0 to 5, as well as a diet scale. Lumen diameter was measured endoscopically, using the open or closed biopsy forceps as a measuring guide. Patients were then given barium capsules or tablets of increasing diameter under fluoroscopy, in the upright position. Pills were given sequentially until a pill failed to traverse the esophagus in less than 20 s. The diameter of the pill failing to traverse the esophagus within 20 s correlated strongly with the endoscopically measured diameter by Spearmans rank correlation (Rs = 0.85). The weakest correlation was between endoscopically measured diameter and the dysphagia scale (Rs = 0.48). The diameter of the pill failing to traverse the esophagus within 20 s is an excellent estimate of esophageal lumen diameter. Pill size correlates much better with esophageal lumen diameter than dysphagia or diet scales. This new dysphagia assessment system should simplify standardization of the grading of dysphagia.
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PMID:A new objective measurement of esophageal lumen patency. 280 75

Nd:YAG laser therapy is an attractive palliative treatment for carcinoma of the esophagus and gastric cardia. Twenty-five patients with these tumors underwent laser therapy over a 2-year period, receiving a total of 52 courses of therapy with 189 treatments. Treatments per course averaged 3.6, with a mean of two courses per patient. Luminal diameter is increased with this method; symptomatic improvement in dysphagia occurred in all patients after one course of therapy. Radiographic improvement also is seen. The complication rate in this series was four (2.1%) of 189 procedures, consisting of one perforation, one tracheoesophageal fistula, one pneumopericardium, and one pneumoperitoneum without leak.
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PMID:Radiographic appearance of the esophagus and stomach after laser treatment of obstructing carcinoma. 348 69

Thirty consecutive patients with far-advanced cancer affecting the esophagus and gastroesophageal junction underwent palliative endoscopic neodymium-YAG laser therapy. No patients were excluded from treatment, regardless of age, extent of disease, or performance status. Sessions were performed every other day and concluded when an endoscope could be easily passed beyond the previously obstructed area. Treatment was completed in 3.3 sessions (seven days). Luminal patency was achieved in 97%, but did not always equate with functional success. Seventy percent (21 patients) were able to ingest all necessary calories and leave hospital for home (functional success). Reasons for discrepancy between technical success and functional success included radiation-induced pharyngeal dysphagia, anorexia, painful tumor load and debility, and treatment complications. Endoscopic laser therapy of far-advanced esophageal or gastroesophageal junction carcinoma was almost always technically feasible, with relatively low morbidity. While technical success could not always be equated with functional success, therapy was "completely" functionally successful in 70% of patients with far-advanced disease. Poor performance status at accession correlated best with poor functional outcome.
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PMID:Endoscopic laser therapy for malignancies affecting the esophagus and gastroesophageal junction. Analysis of technical and functional efficacy. 402 76

BACKGROUND: Cure of patients with esophageal cancer has remained rare over the past four decades. The overall five-year survival rate for squamous cell and adenocarcinoma of the esophagus currently is reported as 12% in whites and 8% in blacks. The five-year survival rate for localized disease at initial staging is only 26% for whites and 13% for blacks. With regional involvement, these rates are 11% and 7%, respectively. METHODS: The author reviews the literature on optimal endoscopic lumen restoration techniques, including dilation, thermal laser and chemical ablation, photodynamic therapy, and stents. Procedures for pain relief and nutritional support are also presented. RESULTS: Lumen restoration to relieve dysphagia and provide the opportunity for sustaining reasonable peroral nutrition is an essential element in the overall management. Nonsurgical lumen restoration procedures have much to offer for dysphagia palliation and are briefly reviewed in this presentation. The major options include ablation of intraluminal tumor mass by thermal laser, photodynamic laser, chemical ablation, peroral dilation, and placement of esophageal stents. Most patients require more than one palliative method to sustain lumen patency during the course of their disease. CONCLUSIONS: Most patients with esophageal cancer will require palliation for the multiple problems that develop during their limited life span. The responsibility of the palliation therapist is to provide the patient with safe and cost-effective treatments that provide the best possible dysphagia relief.
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PMID:Palliation of Dysphagia of Esophageal Cancer by Endoscopic Lumen Restoration Techniques. 1075 37

Metastatic breast cancer involving the hepatobiliary tract or ascites secondary to peritoneal carcinomatosis has been well described. Luminal gastrointestinal tract involvement is less common and recognition of the range of possible presentations is important for early and accurate diagnosis and treatment. We report 6 patients with a variety of presentations of metastatic breast cancer of the luminal gastrointestinal tract. These include oropharyngeal and esophageal involvement presenting as dysphagia with one case of pseudoachalasia, a linitis plastica-like picture with gastric narrowing and thickened folds, small bowel obstruction and multiple strictures mimicking Crohn's disease, and a colonic neoplasm presenting with obstruction. Lobular carcinoma, representing only 10% of breast cancers is more likely to metastasize to the gastrointestinal tract. These patients presented with gastrointestinal manifestations after an average of 9.5 years and as long as 20 years from initial diagnosis of breast cancer. Given the increased survival of breast cancer patients with current therapeutic regimes, more unusual presentations of metastatic disease, including involvement of the gastrointestinal tract can be anticipated.
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PMID:Metastatic breast cancer to the gastrointestinal tract: a case series and review of the literature. 1703

Luminal distensibility measurement has demonstrated relevance to various disease processes, though its effects on clinical decision-making have been less well understood. This study aims to characterize the clinical impact of impedance planimetry measurement as well as the learning curve associated with its use in the esophagus. A single provider performed distensibility measurement in conjunction with upper endoscopy for a variety of clinical indications with the functional lumen imaging probe (FLIP) over a period of 21 months. Procedural data were prospectively collected and, along with medical records, retrospectively reviewed. Seventy-three procedures (70 patients) underwent esophageal distensibility measurement over the timeline of this study. The most common procedural indications were known or suspected achalasia (32.9%), dysphagia with connective tissue disease (13.7%), eosinophilic esophagitis (12.3%), and dysphagia with prior fundoplication (9.6%). FLIP results independently led to a change in management in 29 (39.7%) cases and supported a change in management in an additional 15 (20.5%) cases. The most common change in management was a new or amended therapeutic procedure (79.5%). Procedural time added by distensibility measurement was greater among earlier cases than among later cases. The median time added overall was 5 minutes and 46 seconds. Procedural time added varied significantly by procedural indication, but changes in management did not. Distensibility measurement added meaningful diagnostic information that impacted therapeutic decision-making in the majority of cases in which it was performed. Procedural time added by this modality is typically modest and decreases with experience.
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PMID:Esophageal distensibility measurement: impact on clinical management and procedure length. 2857 49

Each swallow induces a wave of inhibition followed by contraction in the esophagus. Unlike contraction, which can easily be measured in humans using high-resolution manometry (HRM), inhibition is difficult to measure. Luminal distension is a surrogate of the esophageal inhibition. The aim of this study was to determine the effect of posture on the temporal and quantitative relationship between distension and contraction along the entire length of the esophagus in normal healthy subjects by using concurrent HRM, HRM impedance (HRMZ), and intraluminal ultrasound (US). Studies were conducted in 15 normal healthy subjects in the supine and Trendelenburg positions. Both manual and automated methods were used to extract quantitative pressure and impedance-derived features from the HRMZ recordings. Topographical plots of distension and contraction were visualized along the entire length of the esophagus. Distension was also measured from the US images during 10-ml swallows at 5 cm above the lower esophageal sphincter. Each swallow was associated with luminal distension followed by contraction, both of which traversed the esophagus in a sequential/peristaltic fashion. Luminal distension (US) and esophageal contraction amplitude were greater in the Trendelenburg compared with the supine position. Length of esophageal breaks (in the transition zone) were reduced in the Trendelenburg position. Change in posture altered the temporal relationship between distension and contraction, and bolus traveled closer to the esophageal contraction in the Trendelenburg position. Topographical contraction-distension plots derived from HRMZ recordings is a novel way to visualize esophageal peristalsis. Future studies should investigate if abnormalities of esophageal distension are the cause of functional dysphagia. NEW & NOTEWORTHY Ascending contraction and descending inhibition are two important components of peristalsis. High-resolution manometry only measures the contraction phase of peristalsis. We measured esophageal distension from intraluminal impedance recordings and developed novel contraction-distension topographical plots to prove that similar to contraction, distension also travels in a peristaltic fashion. Change in posture from the supine to the Trendelenburg position also increased the amplitude of esophageal distension and contraction and altered the temporal relationship between distension and contraction.
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PMID:Topographical plots of esophageal distension and contraction: effects of posture on esophageal peristalsis and bolus transport. 3067 74