Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0013395 (
dyspepsia
)
4,879
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In two groups of gallstone patients ideally suited for medical treatment, the effect of six to 18 months' therapy was compared retrospectively in 52 given chenodeoxycholic acid (CDCA) and 46 given ursodeoxycholic acid (UDCA). The minimum dose (mg kg-1 day-1) required to desaturate bile consistently was 10.1 for UDCA and 14.3 for CDCA. In patients completing six months' treatment, 23 of 35 (66%) taking a mean of 7.7 (+/- SEM 0.5) mg UDCA and 34 of 42 (81%) taking 14.7 +/- 0.2 mg CDCA showed partial or complete dissolution of gallstones. The mean dose in the UDCA-treated patients, however, was artefactually lowered by previous dose-response studies: in those who had not taken multiple doses, the mean UDCA intake in the 'responders' at six months was 9.1 +/- 0.3 mg kg-1 day-1. At six months, more UDCA (five of 35 or 14.3%) than CDCA (four of 42 or 9.5%)-treated patients showed complete dissolution of gallstones, but, by one year, the situation was reversed, 20 of 41 (49%) CDCA-treated and eight of 30 (27%) UDCA-treated patients showing complete dissolution of gallstones. Cumulative efficacy at one year had risen to 76% for UDCA and 89% for CDCA. Both treatments reduced the frequency of
dyspepsia
and
biliary colic
; 37% of CDCA and 2.6% of UDCA-treated patients showed hypertransaminasaemia; diarrhoea developed in 60% of the CDCA group but in none of the UDCA group.
...
PMID:Retrospective comparison of 'Cheno' and 'Urso' in the medical treatment of gallstones. 707 15
As part of a continuing audit of patients undergoing laparoscopic cholecystectomy (which now numbers over 1500) 468 of the 508 patients (92.1 per cent) operated on between October 1989 and March 1991 were studied between 350 and 988 days after the operation (mean 19 months). A questionnaire was filled in by each patient before operation and at the late follow-up visit. Eight specific symptoms were sought-non-colicky pain, colic, abdominal distension, nausea, vomiting, loss of appetite, flatulence, and dietary restriction. The result of each operation was assessed by two surgeons and by the patient. In 453 patients (96.8 per cent) the symptoms had improved as a result of the operation, but 260 patients (55.6 per cent) had some abdominal symptoms. The result was assessed as excellent in 310 patients (66.2 per cent); 143 (30.5 per cent) still had abdominal complaints but they were willing to cope with those symptoms. In 15 patients (3.2 per cent) the result was unsatisfactory. Statistical analysis of 26 preoperative variables showed few significant differences between patients with excellent results and patients with persisting or new symptoms. The percentage of patients with
biliary colic
was reduced from 82.9 per cent before to 6.4 per cent after laparoscopic cholecystectomy (P < 0.05), and of those with flatulence from 62.6 per cent to 45.3 per cent (P < 0.05). Flatulence persisted in 147 (50.2 per cent) of the 293 patients who had complained of flatulence before the operation, and of the 175 patients who had not complained of flatulence before surgery, 65 (37.1 per cent) reported the symptom for the first time after the operation. It appears that 'flatulent
dyspepsia
' after cholecystectomy has many causes, one of which may be removal of the gallbladder. It is concluded that the long-term results of laparoscopic cholecystectomy in patients with symptomatic gallstone disease were excellent but the prognosis in individual patients was unpredictable.
...
PMID:Long-term results after laparoscopic cholecystectomy. 774 8
The main symptom of gallstone disease is biliary pain.
Biliary pain
is not necessarily colicky or postprandial, and it most frequently occurs at night during the same clock-time. The relief of biliary pain by cholecystectomy would support the idea that the gallbladder or the stones caused pain. Long-term follow-up studies after cholecystectomy are infrequent, however. Our studies show that biliary pain is relieved in 99% of patients after 4 years of follow-up. The nonspecific symptoms associated with gallstones (i.e.,
dyspepsia
, bloating, belching, etc.) remained in 12% of these patients. We have also shown that the gallbladder itself, without stones, can cause pain and that this biliary pain is relieved in 77% of patients by cholecystectomy. The impact of gallstones on the patient depends on the quality of cholecystectomy as classically measured by morbidity and mortality. However, quality must also be monitored by comparing the long-term relief of biliary pain and the cost. Quality cannot be monitored through inaccurate national databases or multicenter trials. Rather, the continuous quality improvement (CQI) technique of larger centralized health care systems may be the most accurate monitoring system. This technique coordinates the entire health care system by assuming that any process can improve its quality, no matter how good it may already be. Our CQI laparoscopic cholecystectomy database has yielded preliminary perspectives on accurate data collection and improving costs. After a thorough examination, 5% of the database contained cases not done laparoscopically (coding errors), whereas it missed 21% of true laparoscopic cholecystectomy cases (staff errors). Only with the accuratized database were we able to provide insight into cost-savings procedures.
...
PMID:Clinical manifestations and impact of gallstone disease. 848 Aug 72
Agenesis of the gallbladder, with normal bile ducts, is a rare congenital condition occurring in 13 to 65 per 100,000 population, probably from failure of the gallbladder bud to develop or vacuolize in utero. Adults are usually asymptomatic. We report a 40-year-old woman with gallbladder agenesis, found at operation for presumed gallbladder disease. We review 44 similar cases:
dyspepsia
was the predominant symptom in 15 of 44 patients (34%); 24 of 44 (54%) had symptoms suggestive of
biliary colic
, and 12 of 44 (27%) had jaundice. Common duct stones were found in eight of 12 patients who were jaundiced, but not in any other. A familial tendency was reported in five series. Our patient and one other had another congenital anomaly. Ultrasound was performed on five patients: three had a small, shrunken gallbladder and in two the gallbladder was absent. Ultrasound may suggest the diagnosis if absence of the gallbladder is demonstrated in conjunction with another congenital anomaly.
...
PMID:Agenesis of the gallbladder in symptomatic adults. A case and review of the literature. 850 96
From 1990 through 1993, we treated 36 patients with recurrent typical
biliary colic
but who showed no ultrasonic evidence of cholelithiasis by laparoscopic cholecystectomy. Associated symptoms included nausea (75%), bloating (56%), fatty-food intolerance (53%), vomiting (17%), weight loss (31%), bowel irregularity (28%), reflux or
dyspepsia
(25%), and fever (17%). Diagnostic evaluation included ultrasound (100%), upper gastrointestinal series (36%), oral cholecystogram (14%), computed tomographic scan (39%), endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (17%), upper gastrointestinal endoscopy (14%), and hepatobiliary scan (92%). Quantitative hepatobiliary scans in 33 patients revealed a low gallbladder ejection fraction (EF) of less than 35% in 29 patients (88%; mean EF = 9%), and 13 patients experienced reproducible pain after cholecystokinin provocation. All patients underwent attempted laparoscopic cholecystectomy; one case of unsuspected acute acalculous cholecystitis was converted to open laparotomy because of unclear anatomy. Gross and histological examination of the gallbladders revealed chronic inflammation (83%), cholesterolosis (31%), cholesterol crystals or small stones (17%), acute inflammation (8%), polyps (6%), and normal histology (6%); however, blind retrospective scoring of gallbladders revealed significant chronic inflammation in only 38%. In the 2 to 40 months (mean, 14 months) since operation, there have been no deaths (97% follow-up). Laparoscopic cholecystectomy relieved pain in 93% of patients with a low preoperative EF compared with 75% of patients with a normal EF (nonsignificant p value). Persistent abdominal or gastrointestinal complaints included flatulence (31%), loose stools or fecal urgency (29%), belching (29%),
indigestion
(20%), nausea (11%), and "typical"
gallbladder pain
(9%). We conclude that many patients with symptoms of
biliary colic
and scintigraphic evidence of biliary dyskinesia have histologic findings of chronic cholecystitis. Although laparoscopic cholecystectomy usually eliminates
biliary colic
, persistent nonbiliary complaints are frequent.
...
PMID:Chronic acalculous cholecystitis: laparoscopic treatment. 868 Jun 33
We have assessed the relationship between
dyspepsia
and gallstones and evaluated the effects of cholecystectomy on symptoms, endoscopic findings, and degree of duodenogastric reflux. Thirty patients with gallstones were enrolled in our study. Their symptoms, gastroscopic findings, and bile salt concentrations in fasting gastric juice were evaluated before and after surgery. Before cholecystectomy,
biliary colic
was present in 26 patients and
dyspepsia
in 20 patients; 16 patients also had
biliary colic
. After surgery,
biliary colic
disappeared in all patients. Dyspeptic symptoms improved in 12 patients (40%), 13 (43%) remained the same, and five patients (17%) developed
dyspepsia
or showed increase in their symptoms, the postcholecystectomy syndrome (PCS). Endoscopic gastritis developed in 50% after surgery compared with 30% before. Benign gastric ulcers developed in three patients, whereas none had been present before. Concentration of bile salts in fasting gastric juice increased from 0.56 +/- 0.4 mM to 1.47 +/- 0.75 mM after cholecystectomy (p < 0.0001). There was a positive correlation between the severity of symptoms in the postcholecystectomy syndrome and the change in the concentration of bile salts in fasting gastric juice (p = 0.0012). These observations suggest that duodenogastric reflux may play a significant role in the pathogenesis of symptoms in the postcholecystectomy syndrome.
...
PMID:The postcholecystectomy syndrome. A role for duodenogastric reflux. 872 57
The expectation that cholecystectomy is effective treatment for symptomatic gallstones is not always achieved in surgical practice. The impact of cholecystectomy on the relief of gastrointestinal symptoms was evaluated in 92 patients followed up after surgery for a mean of 31.1 months (range 12-83 months). Abdominal pain continued to be present, or arose de novo, in 28 (30.4%) patients. Pain-free outcome after cholecystectomy was associated with a preoperative clinical diagnosis of
biliary colic
, fatty food intolerance, and a thick-walled gallbladder on ultrasound (P = 0.02). Logistic regression associated a thick-walled gallbladder, elevated gamma-glutamyl transpetidase, body mass index < 26, fat intolerance, and normal bowel habit with good postoperative results (P = 0.001). Application of each of these five factors to a clinical index failed to predict long-term pain-free outcome after cholecystectomy. Abdominal bloating (P = 0.03),
dyspepsia
(P < 0.001), heartburn (P < 0.007), fat intolerance (P < 0.001), nausea (P = 0.001) and vomiting (P < 0.001) were significantly improved after cholecystectomy, but diarrhoea, constipation and excessive flatus were not. Outcome benefit ratios confirmed that vomiting (0.96), nausea (0.87),
dyspepsia
(0.67), fat intolerance (0.57) and heartburn (0.51) were relieved by surgery. Cholecystectomy improved symptoms compared with a matched control group, suggesting that surgery remains the gold standard treatment of symptomatic gallstones.
...
PMID:Is cholecystectomy effective treatment for symptomatic gallstones? Clinical outcome after long-term follow-up. 984 45
While many definitions exist,
dyspepsia
is best considered a symptom complex (not a diagnosis) thought to arise in the upper gastrointestinal tract, unrelated to defecation. The symptom complex includes: upper abdominal/epigastric pain or discomfort, postprandial fullness, bloating, belching, early satiety, anorexia, nausea, retching, vomiting, heartburn and regurgitation. Patients with typical gastroesophageal reflux,
biliary colic
and irritable bowel syndrome should not be considered to have
dyspepsia
. After investigations, if a cause of
dyspepsia
is found, this is 'organic or structural'
dyspepsia
. If no structural cause is found, this is best called 'functional
dyspepsia
', subclassified into a) ulcer-like b) dysmotility-like c) reflux-like and d) unspecified
dyspepsia
. This symptom guided classification should be shifted to the first presentation with uninvestigated
dyspepsia
, prior to any investigations, to define a clinically useful guide to patient care. As there is considerable symptom overlap, it may be useful to combine together the ulcer and reflux-like groups into an acid-related
dyspepsia
group. In 1998, another approach would be to screen dyspeptic patients with an H. pylori test and classify them as H. pylori positive and negative
dyspepsia
.
...
PMID:Definitions of dyspepsia: time for a reappraisal. 1002 67
We report on our experience with laparoscopic cholecystectomy in 15 patients, 12 females and 3 males (mean age: 44 years), with chronic acalculous cholecystitis. These patients presented with recurrent episodes of
biliary colic
together with a dysmorphic or dysfunctioning gallbladder as confirmed by ultrasound and/or cholescintiscan with 99m-Tc HIDA performed in fasting conditions and after meals. First of all, we considered the possible presence of concomitant digestive disease (peptic ulcer disease, recurrent pancreatitis, irritable bowel syndrome, chronic hepatitis) potentially responsible for the pain. Ultrasound investigations revealed a pathological gallbladder in 10 patients. Cholecystectomy was curative in 8/10. Cholescintiscan revealed a pathological gallbladder in 8 patients and cholecystectomy was curative in only 5 of these. No postoperative deaths or significant complications occurred. The mean duration of the operation (35 vs 48 min) and hospital stay (2.1 vs 2.8 days) were reduced in comparison to 346 cholecystectomies performed for gallstones. After 6-36 months' follow-up, resolution of symptoms was successful in 10/15 cases (66.6%); in 3 cases, only
dyspepsia
was reduced, whilst in the other 2 cases, who also presented concomitant irritable bowel syndrome and gastroduodenitis, there was no improvement in pain. In all but the latter two cases (86.6%), histological examination revealed chronic gallbladder inflammation. In conclusion, laparoscopic cholecystectomy was curative (66.6%) or led to an improvement in symptoms (20%) in patients with chronic acalculous cholcystitis. Cholescintiscans were not always diagnostic for the disease, whereas ultrasound findings were more useful as an indication for surgery.
...
PMID:[Diagnostic problems and results of laparoscopic cholecystectomy in chronic acalculous cholecystitis]. 1119 May 28
A 35 years old lady presented with fever,
biliary colic
, mild jaundice,
indigestion
and flatulence. The upper abdominal ultrasonography revealed cholecystitis with sludge and a round worm in the common bile duct. Laparoscopic cholecystectomy and exploration of the bile duct for the removal of round worm was performed. The post-operative period was uneventful and the patient was discharged fit on the 4th post-operative day.
...
PMID:Laparoscopic common bile duct exploration for extraction of a round worm. 1754 95
<< Previous
1
2
3
Next >>