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Query: UMLS:C0013395 (
dyspepsia
)
4,879
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A questionnaire has been completed by 99 patients referred for investigation of symptoms after gastric operations. The replies were analysed in an attempt to distinguish patients with a recurrent peptic ulcer from those with no recurrent ulcer. All cases were investigated by barium meal, endoscopy, and oral cholecystography. All recurrent ulcers were confirmed by reoperation and patients with gastric
carcinoma
, gallstones, or symptomatic hiatus hernia were excluded. The study was retrospective in 40 patients in whom the diagnosis was already confirmed when the questionnaire was analysed and prospective in 59 in whom the diagnosis was originally unknown. The replies were analysed with (a) a small computer using Bayes' theorem, (b) weighted tables, and (c) a discriminant analysis. The computer prediction of the prospective data was 85% accurate. The results of simpler methods were almost as good as the computer prediction, and questions related only to the severity of pain and vomiting accurately distinguished recurrent ulcer from other causes of
dyspepsia
in 81% of patients.
...
PMID:A symptomatic discriminant to identify recurrent ulcer in patients with dysperpsia after gastric surgery. 5 52
In some patients, gallstones are asymptomatic, lying dormant in the gallbladder or wedged in the cystic duct. In others, stones cause specific symptoms of gallbladder disease, such as biliary colic, acute cholecystitis, or cholangitis. Symptoms of flatulent
dyspepsia
are not markers of gallstone disease, since they occur equally in those with and without gallstones. Complications of gallstone disease include pancreatitis, biliary-enteric fistulas, hydrops, limy bile, porcelain gallsbladder, and
carcinoma
of the gallbladder. Cholecystectomy is indicated for symptomatic gallstones; for suspected stones in diabetics, who are at high risk should complications of gallstone disease occur; and in a few other limited situations. Prophylactic cholecystectomy for asymptomatic gallstones remains controversial.
...
PMID:Manifestations of gallstone disease. 48 73
One-hundred and one patients admitted to hospital with acute upper gastrointestinal haemorrhage whose initial barium-meal X-ray examination revealed no abnormality have been followed up 5 to 14 years later. Forty-five were symptom-free, and 8 had
dyspepsia
, but the barium-meal X-ray findings were still normal. Disease of the lower oesophagus, the stomach or the duodenum was found in 20, 16 of whom had a chronic peptic ulcer and two had gastric
carcinoma
. There was a poor prognosis for those gastric-ulcer patients whose diagnosis had been missed initially.
...
PMID:Acute upper gastrointestinal haemorrhage with negative barium-meal x-ray findings: follow-up investigation. 108 53
Villous tumors of the duodenum are rare, but treatment may be problematic because of their association with invasive adenocarcinoma. Two cases of villous tumor of the duodenum are described and 39 other reported cases are reviewed. Presenting symptoms were bleeding 27%; obstruction 24%; jaundice 22% and vague
dyspepsia
20%. Diagnosis may be made by radiographic barium contrast evaluation of the duodenum, especially with the addition of air contrast hypotonic studies and by fibro-optic endoscopy. Twenty-seven per cent of villous tumors of the duodenum are associated with adenocarcinoma. Invasive tumor is more common in patients over 50 years old (35%), in tumors of the third and fourth portions of the duodenum (44%) and in tumors over 4 cm in diameter (30%). Local excision is the treatment of choice for benign lesions. Pancreatico-duodenectomy is recommended for tumors which include invasive
carcinoma
in patients without distal metastases.
...
PMID:Villous tumors of the duodenum. 111 48
Fasting serum pyridoxal was assayed by an automated microbiological system in 60 patients investigated for
dyspepsia
, patients with active peptic ulceration being excluded from the study. Gastritis was present in 30 patients, gastric
carcinoma
in 16, six patients had benign polyps, and, in eight patients, radiology, endoscopy, and biopsy failed to shown any abnormality. Of the 52 patients with gastric pathology, 44 had a low serum pyridoxal.
...
PMID:Serum pyridoxal in patients with gastric pathology. 127 21
Considerable knowledge has recently accumulated on the mechanism by which Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) induces chronic gastritis. Although H. pylori is not an invasive bacterium, soluble surface constituents can provoke pepsinogen release from gastric chief cells or trigger local inflammation in the underlying tissue. Urease appears to be one of the prime chemoattractants for recruitment and activation of inflammatory cells. Release of cytokines, such as tumor necrosis factor alpha, interleukin 1 and 6, and oxygen radicals, leads to a further tissue inflammation accompanied by a potent systemic IgA and IgG type of immune response. Chronic inflammation and antigens on glandular epithelial cells lead to a progressive destruction with loss of the epithelial barrier function. Within the gastric mucosa, patches of intestinal metaplasia develop, which may be a risk factor for subsequent development of gastric
carcinoma
. Hyperacidity in duodenal ulcer patients induces gastric metaplasia in the duodenal bulb, which represents a target for H. pylori colonization and ulcer formation. H. pylori can be detected in the majority of patients with peptic ulcers and, compared to age-matched healthy people, it is also found more often in patients with
dyspepsia
and gastric
carcinoma
. Although H. pylori can be detected in healthy people, the marked reduction of the ulcer recurrence rate by eradication of H. pylori (80 percent versus 20 percent relapse within one year) suggests that H. pylori is a major risk factor for duodenal ulcer formation. The potential role of H. pylori in non-ulcer
dyspepsia
and carcinogenesis is under investigation. Current regimens aimed at eradicating H. pylori use a combination of several drugs that are potentially toxic. Since the risk of complications may exceed the potential benefit in most patients, eradication treatment should be limited to clinical trials and to patients with aggressive ulcer disease. New drug regimens, e.g., the combination of proton pump inhibitors with one antibiotic, may provide less toxic alternatives. Beyond ulcer treatment, effective and well-tolerated eradication regimens may have a place in prophylaxis of gastric
carcinoma
.
...
PMID:Pathophysiology and clinical relevance of Helicobacter pylori. 134 Oct 68
The purpose of this study is to investigate the incidence of NUD in Japan and to describe the clinical presentation of NUD. The population of this study consisted of the patients initially visited to our gastroenterology clinic during the period of one year from Feb. 1990 to Jan. 1991. Out of the total population, 106 patients with
dyspepsia
were suspected of NUD according to the definition of AGA, and have received the endoscopy and ultrasonography to find the existence of organic disease. While 50 cases presented organic diseases (19 peptic ulcers, 16 gastritis, 7
carcinoma
, 4 gall stone, 4 esophageal disease), 56 cases were with no organic diseases and were regarded as NUD. NUD was more common in younger generation and was especially so in women under 40 years old. There was no significant difference in symptoms between NUD and organic diseases. On the other hand, peptic ulcer disease was frequently associated with sever epigastralgia, and smoking habit as a external factor, while abdominal fullness was predominant feature observed in NUD.
...
PMID:[Epidemiology of non-ulcer dyspepsia (NUD) in Japan]. 140 84
This investigation was aimed at assessing whether the Yemeni habit of chewing Qat on a regular basis had a significant effect on the upper alimentary tract. Seventy patients with
dyspepsia
attending Al-Thawra Hospital in Taiz, Yemen Republic were examined by endoscopy. Biopsies were taken from the oesophagus, stomach and duodenum. The patients included 28 who gave a history of daily Qat intake, 21 with less frequent intake and 21 who took none. The only statistically significant finding associated with daily Qat intake was a higher prevalence of duodenal ulcer, particularly in females. However, a strong association was also found between heavy smoking and ulcer, with most ulcer patients who chewed Qat daily being heavy smokers. Chewing Qat was not associated with a higher prevalence of oesophageal dysplasia, making it unlikely to be the cause of the perceived high incidence of oesophageal
carcinoma
in Yemen. There was a high prevalence of gastric H. pylori colonization (93%) and columnar-lined lower end of oesophagus (18%), as well as low prevalence of intestinal metaplasia of stomach (4%); this was not, however, related to chewing Qat. Further epidemiological and histological studies are needed to assess the significance of these findings in relation to the incidence of oesophageal and gastric
carcinoma
in Yemen.
...
PMID:Effect of chewing Qat on mucosal histology and prevalence of Helicobacter pylori in the oesophagus, stomach and duodenum of Yemeni patients. 175 83
Helicobacter pylori is a microaerophilic, Gram-negative, spiral rod, the role of which in different gastric diseases has been investigated worldwide since the beginning of the 1980s. H. pylori has been shown to be the causative agent in active chronic gastritis, and it is regularly found in patients endoscopied for duodenal ulcer. The bacterium is also frequently isolated from persons with gastric ulcer, gastric
carcinoma
and non-ulcer
dyspepsia
. Apart from cultivation of the bacterium, other diagnostic procedures include various staining methods and urease tests of gastric biopsy samples. The application of non-invasive diagnostic methods, serology and urea breath tests, is rapidly increasing. H. pylori is susceptible to several antimicrobials in vitro, but eradication of the bacterium from the gastric mucosa is not always achieved. The best results until now have been obtained with the combined use of bismuth salts and two antibiotics. In active chronic gastritis and duodenal ulcer patients, eradication of the bacteria has resulted in healing of the disease with permanent decrease of circulating antibodies and negative urease tests. H. pylori has been found worldwide and the infection shows an age-dependent increase. Man, apparently, is the reservoir of the bacterium, but the exact mechanisms of interhuman transmission are still not defined.
...
PMID:Helicobacter pylori and associated gastroduodenal diseases. Review article. 185 43
The prevalence of lymphocytic gastritis, a specific form of chronic gastritis characterized by infiltration of gastric superficial epithelium with T lymphocytes, has been established in nonulcer
dyspepsia
. Among a population sample of 586 patients at risk for gastric
carcinoma
, 0.83% of patients with nonulcer
dyspepsia
and 1.63% of patients with chronic active gastritis showed lymphocytic gastritis. Among routine gastric biopsies from 5130 patients, only five cases met histological and immunohistochemical criteria of lymphocytic gastritis.
...
PMID:Lymphocytic gastritis in nonulcer dyspepsia. 186
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