Gene/Protein
Disease
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Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Drug
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Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Query: UMLS:C0013395 (
dyspepsia
)
4,879
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Dyspepsia
is a common, benign condition that may be distinguished from gastroesophageal reflux, irritable bowel syndrome and pancreatobiliary, coronary or
musculoskeletal disease
by a careful history and physical examination. However, the presence or absence of a peptic ulcer in
dyspepsia
can be determined only by an endoscopic examination or a barium-contrast radiograph. Although the American College of Physicians has recommended trying drug therapy for patients with
dyspepsia
before diagnostic tests are done, new data support early diagnosis. Although therapy is initially cheaper than endoscopic examination, over a year the costs even out because most patients with
dyspepsia
eventually need an endoscopic examination, and many patients with nonulcer
dyspepsia
are given medication unnecessarily. Endoscopic examination, if available to general practitioners, is the most cost-effective approach to
dyspepsia
. An approach that does not include endoscopy lacks the opportunity to offer patients convincing reassurance that their illness is not serious, which is arguably the most important treatment in cases of nonulcer
dyspepsia
. Studies supporting the use of endoscopic examination predate the treatment of peptic ulcers with antibiotics, which makes an initial endoscopic examination to determine whether the patient has an ulcer even more important.
...
PMID:Dyspepsia: is a trial of therapy appropriate? 749 82
This cross-sectional psychiatric and cardiological study compared patients with and without coronary artery disease (CAD) with respect to psychiatric morbidity, psychological factors, pain characteristics, medical morbidity and the prevalence of coronary risk factors. The 199 participants had been referred to cardiological outpatient clinics for the investigation of chest pain and had no history of heart disease. Current panic disorder occurred significantly more often in non-CAD patients (41% vs. 22%). No significant differences were found for other psychiatric disorders and psychological variables. Non-CAD patients reported significantly longer histories of pain and a higher prevalence of atypical chest pain. In other respects, there were surprisingly few differences between the groups. High morbidity of both psychiatric disease (pain disorder, 19%; any current psychiatric disorder, 72%) and somatic conditions (
musculoskeletal disease
, 33%;
dyspepsia
, 23%) was found with no significant differences between the groups. In these patients, multifactorial complaints may explain chest pain in both patient groups. The physicians should attend to psychiatric disorders in non-CAD as well as in CAD patients.
...
PMID:Psychological factors, pain attribution and medical morbidity in chest-pain patients with and without coronary artery disease. 1556 12