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Query: UMLS:C0013395 (
dyspepsia
)
4,879
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Behavioral research in gastroenterology has grown exponentially over the last decade. Controlled studies demonstrate that psychotherapy, stress management, and hypnosis are effective for irritable bowel syndrome; and behavioral treatments are preferred over medical management for some types of fecal incontinence and vomiting. For peptic ulcer disease, interest in behavioral treatments has declined. However, a new syndrome, functional
dyspepsia
, is now recognized, in which ulcerlike symptoms occur without ulcer and frequently in association with psychological symptoms. For inflammatory bowel disease, stress management training has produced inconsistent outcomes. Newly recognized disorders for which behavioral treatments are needed include constipation associated with inability to relax the pelvic floor muscles during defecation, functional rectal pain (proctalgia), noncardiac
chest pain
, and aerophagia (excessive air swallowing).
...
PMID:Behavioral medicine approaches to gastrointestinal disorders. 150 8
Gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) remains a ubiquitous problem, although therapeutic options continue to evolve. Effective therapy calls for understanding the pathogenesis. Key factors associated with GERD include incompetence of the lower esophageal sphincter, esophageal clearance, gastric contents, tissue resistance, and potency of the refluxate. Phase-type directed therapy remains the best treatment approach and histamine (H2)-receptor antagonists are now the cornerstone of therapy for patients not responsive to conservative measures. In a subset of patients with severe esophagitis who do not respond to conventional H2-receptor antagonist therapy, efficacy has been demonstrated with high-dose therapy. The acid suppressant omeprazole, highly effective in erosive esophagitis, is the drug of choice for esophagitis resistant to H2-receptor antagonists. Despite effective forms of therapy, relapse rates are high in patients with severe GERD, and maintenance therapy typically is required. With near uniformity, efficacy end points for these agents have been directed toward relief of heartburn, regurgitation, and
dyspepsia
. Few data exist correlating relief of GERD and improvement of
chest pain
. Although therapeutic strategies for treating GERD have improved, empiric treatment of suspected GERD in the patient with noncardiac
chest pain
does not appear to be the optimal approach and should be reserved for cases where diagnostic testing is limited or unavailable.
...
PMID:Medical therapy for gastroesophageal reflux disease. 159 72
Serotonin (5-hydroxytryptamine; 5-HT) is found in the enteric nervous system where it has been implicated in controlling gastrointestinal motor function. A number of receptor or recognition sites have been identified in the gut, but recently most attention has focused on the 5-HT3 and 5-HT4 receptors. The functional role of the 5-HT3 receptor remains incompletely understood, but it is probably involved in the modulation of colonic motility and visceral pain in the gut. A number of selective 5-HT3 antagonists have been developed including ondansetron, granisetron, tropisetron renzapride and zacopride. While the substituted benzamide prokinetics (for example, metoclopramide, cisapride) also block 5-HT3 receptors in high concentrations, their prokinetic action is believed to be on the basis of their agonist effects on the putative 5-HT4 receptor. Some 5-HT3 antagonists have 5-HT4 agonist activity (for example, renzapride, zacopride) and others do not (for example, ondansetron, granisetron), while tropisetron in high concentrations is a 5-HT4 antagonist. Based on the pharmacological data, it has been suggested that specific 5-HT antagonists and agonists may prove to be beneficial in a number of gastrointestinal disorders including the irritable bowel syndrome, functional
dyspepsia
, non-cardiac
chest pain
, gastrooesophageal reflux and refractory nausea. In this review, the rationale for the use of these compounds is discussed, and the available experimental evidence is summarized.
...
PMID:Review article: 5-hydroxytryptamine agonists and antagonists in the modulation of gastrointestinal motility and sensation: clinical implications. 160 46
Gastrointestinal motility is greatly influenced by both the autonomic nervous system (ANS) and the enteric nervous system (ENS). Dysfunction of ANS and/or ENS produces various kinds of dysmotility from the esophagus to the colon. Generalized autonomic dysfunction, often seen in diabetics, causes abnormal peristaltic waves in the esophagus, abnormal electrical activity of the stomach, delayed gastric emptying and delayed intestinal transit. Localized disorders of the enteric nervous system is seen in patients with achalasia and Hirschsprung's diseases. Functional disorders, without evidence of organic disorders, like non-cardiac
chest pain
, non-ulcer
dyspepsia
, irritable bowel syndrome, can be partly caused by abnormal function of autonomic nervous system.
...
PMID:[Gastrointestinal motility and autonomic nerve dysfunction]. 161 54
The frequency and the possible age-related characteristics of gastro-oesophageal reflux disease (GORD) were investigated in 195 consecutive elderly subjects (mean age 74 years), referred to endoscopy for abdominal symptoms or sideropenic anaemia. In the 105 of these patients in whom there was any suspicion of GORD, 24-hour pH monitoring was carried out. All the patients were interviewed before the examinations. Erosive or complicated (grade 2-4) oesophagitis was found in 18% of patients. The main symptoms in these patients were dysphagia, respiratory symptoms and vomiting. Chronic cough, hoarseness or wheezing were present in 57% of patients with oesophagitis compared with 33% of those without oesophagitis (p less than 0.001). The occurrence of heartburn and regurgitation did not differ significantly between patients with or without oesophagitis, although the mean symptom scores were higher in those with oesophagitis.
Dyspepsia
and
chest pain
were not typical symptoms in oesophagitis. Of patients with oesophagitis 29% had no typical symptoms of GORD; only 24% of patients with regurgitation had oesophagitis. In 24-hour pH monitoring, a significant increase in the occurrence of symptoms was not seen until total reflux time pH less than 4 exceeded 10%. The occurrence of heartburn did not correlate with the extent of reflux in the pH study. In conclusion, typical symptoms of GORD in the aged were regurgitation, dysphagia, respiratory symptoms and vomiting rather than heartburn.
...
PMID:Symptoms of gastro-oesophageal reflux disease in elderly people. 175 93
A high proportion (40%) of patients with definite myocardial ischaemia who were questioned on admission to a Cardiac Monitoring Unit had experienced preceding
chest pain
which had been misinterpreted by both the patients themselves and doctors as '
indigestion
' and which had often been inappropriately treated. '
Indigestion
' in the chest in previously non-dyspeptic subjects over 40 years of age should be regarded as myocardial ischaemia until proved otherwise.
...
PMID:Chest pain--indigestion or impending heart attack? 673 90
It is widely appreciated that visceral pain differs significantly from pain that arises from cutaneous structures. Visceral pain is difficult for both the patient and physician to localize because it is diffuse in character and is typically referred to cutaneous structures. Further, there are differences between acute, post-operative visceral pain and the altered sensations associated with the so-called functional bowel disorders (e.g. non-ulcer
dyspepsia
, non-cardiac
chest pain
and irritable bowel syndrome). A variety of considerations suggests that sensory inputs from the fiscera, like nociceptive inputs from the skin, can be sensitized. Accordingly, inputs from the viscera that are not typically perceived may give rise to discomfort and pain if either visceral afferent fibres are sensitized or central neurones undergo a change in excitability ('central sensitization') after persistent visceral input. The anatomy and potential mechanisms associated with visceral hyperalgesia will be considered as will new information about opioid modulation of visceral inputs to the spinal cord.
...
PMID:Visceral nociception: consequences, modulation and the future. 764 39
Although physiological stimuli in the healthy gastrointestinal tract are generally not associated with conscious perception, chronic abdominal discomfort and pain are the most common symptoms resulting in patient visits with gastroenterologists. Symptoms may be associated with inflammatory conditions of the gut or occur in the form of so-called functional disorders. The majority of patients with functional disorders appear to primarily have inappropriate perception of physiological events and altered reflex responses in different gut regions. Recent breakthroughs in the neurophysiology of somatic and visceral sensation are providing a series of plausible mechanisms to explain the development of chronic hyperalgesia within the human gastrointestinal tract. A central concept to all these mechanisms is the development of hyperexcitability of neurons in the dorsal horn, which can develop either in response to peripheral tissue irritation or in response to descending influences originating in the brainstem. Taking clinical characteristics and the concept of central hyperexcitability into account, a model is proposed by which abdominal pain from chronic inflammatory conditions of the gut and functional bowel disorders such as noncardiac
chest pain
, nonulcer
dyspepsia
, and irritable bowel syndrome could develop by multiple mechanisms either alone or in combination.
...
PMID:Basic and clinical aspects of visceral hyperalgesia. 783 12
Patients with non-cardiac
chest pain
(NCCP) (n = 387) and cardiac
chest pain
(CCP) (n = 93) were compared with community controls (n = 81), using a symptom questionnaire that assessed the presence of irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), functional
dyspepsia
, and oesophageal dysfunction and
chest pain
characteristics. A significantly (p < 0.05) increased prevalence of symptoms compatible with IBS occurred in NCCP patients when compared with those with CCP and with controls. Dysphagia was more frequent in both those with non-cardiac and cardiac
chest pain
than in controls; this was not apparent, however, when patients with concomitant IBS were excluded. The presence of oesophageal or gastrointestinal symptoms did not enable discrimination with regard to the
chest pain
characteristics. We conclude that unselected referred patients with documented NCCP are more likely to have IBS and that the presence of oesophageal symptoms such as dysphagia may merely reflect the spectrum of the 'irritable gut'.
...
PMID:Functional gastrointestinal disorders in unselected patients with non-cardiac chest pain. 836 9
Studies of
dyspepsia
show a 1% to 2% prevalence in adults, and 25% to 40% of these patients do not have a physical reason for their symptoms. These findings prompted us to do a retrospective follow-up study of 390 patients having motility studies for
chest pain
and gastrointestinal (GI) symptoms; 278 (71%) responded. Patients were asked to complete a self-rating symptom questionnaire regarding current GI symptoms and current symptoms of anxiety, panic, and depression; they were also asked to complete the Brief Symptom Inventory. Two groups were compared--those with known heart disease and those without heart disease. Substantial numbers of patients in both groups satisfied criteria for generalized anxiety disorders (> 70%), panic disorder (> 30%), and major depression (> 35%). GI symptoms compatible with nonulcer
dyspepsia
were strongly associated with a psychiatric diagnosis. Our data suggest that anxiety and depressive states are strongly associated with
dyspepsia
and other GI symptoms not caused by ulcer disease.
...
PMID:Nonulcer dyspepsia associated with psychiatric disorder. 850 84
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