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Query: UMLS:C0013395 (
dyspepsia
)
4,879
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The treatment of anemia in hemodialysis patients is frequently hindered by the presence of suboptimal iron stores. Intravenous iron dextran is in common use to maintain iron stores in this population, but there are little published data regarding the incidence and type of adverse events. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the safety of this medication. Charts from four hemodialysis centers of all 573 patients treated with intravenous iron dextran (INFeD; Schein Pharmaceutical, Inc, Florham Park, NJ) between July 1, 1993, and June 30, 1995, were studied. Twenty-seven patients (4.7%) had adverse reactions that were related to iron dextran. Four patients (0.7%) had reactions classified as serious (one cardiac arrest; three others required hospitalization). Ten patients (1.7%) had reactions classified as anaphylactoid. No patients died or developed permanent disability as a result of reactions. The most common adverse reactions included itching (1.5% of patients) and dyspnea or wheezing (1.5%); others included
chest pain
(1.0%), nausea (0.5%), hypotension (0.5%), swelling (0.5%),
dyspepsia
(0.5%), diarrhea (0.5%), skin flushing (0.3%), headache (0.3%), cardiac arrest (0.2%), and myalgias (0.2%). Five of all the reactions occurred during a test dose; four of these were anaphylactoid. Several factors were studied as possible predictors of adverse reactions. A positive history of drug allergy (odds ratio, 2.4; P = 0.03) and history of multiple drug allergy (odds ratio, 5.5; P = 0.0004) were significant predictors of reactions. In summary, we found serious adverse reactions to be uncommon in hemodialysis patients treated with intravenous iron dextran. Future prospective studies will help confirm this finding.
...
PMID:The safety of intravenous iron dextran in hemodialysis patients. 1067 41
The pathophysiology of functional gastro-intestinal disorders remains unclear. A relatively new approach to these disorders has been the study of visceral sensory perception. A decreased pain threshold to intraluminal balloon distension has been demonstrated in patients with irritable bowel syndrome, functional
dyspepsia
, and non-cardiac
chest pain
. This altered visceral sensitivity does not appear to extend to somatic sensation; patients have generally had normal sensory thresholds to various stimuli applied to the skin. It is uncertain whether altered gut sensation represents a primary event in the pathogenesis of disease or simply a disease marker. In this review, we examine the evidence of altered visceral sensation and discuss the implications for patient management and drug therapy.
...
PMID:Visceral perception in functional gastro-intestinal disorders: disease marker or epiphenomenon? 890 13
Functional disorders like functional
dyspepsia
, irritable bowel syndrome and non-cardiac
chest pain
are common diseases. No organic lesion can be found to explain the often disabling symptoms. Typical features of functional
dyspepsia
are anxiety, depression, neuroticism, visceral hypersensitivity, abnormal autonomic nerve activity with a weak vagal and an higher sympathetic tone, and impairment of gastric accommodation. This last abnormality may be due to weak vagal tone and poor adaptive relaxation of the proximal stomach. The degree of dysfunction of the variables is sometimes correlated, suggesting that the pathogenetic factors may be interacting in a viscious circle. Medical therapy is often unsuccessful, but extensive research in the field has given better insight into the pathophysiological mechanisms, giving hope for new therapeutic modalities, including visceral analgesics. It may still be difficult, however, to distinguish organic from functional disorders. Reliable tests of visceral hypersensitivity would be helpful in this respect.
...
PMID:[When you get a gut feeling...]. 901 85
A large number of Ethiopians reside abroad as refugees, immigrants, or students. To provide adequate care, physicians must understand their beliefs about health and medicine. To Ethiopians, health is an equilibrium between the body and the outside. Excess sun is believed to cause mitch ("sunstroke"), leading to skin disease. Blowing winds are thought to cause pain wherever they hit. Sexually transmitted disease is attributed to urinating under a full moon. People with buda, "evil eye," are said to be able to harm others by looking at them. Ethiopians often complain of rasehn, "my head" (often saying it burns); yazorehnyal, "spinning" (not a true vertigo); and libehn, "my heart" (usually indicating
dyspepsia
rather than a cardiac problem). Most Ethiopians have faith in traditional healers and procedures. In children, uvulectomy (to prevent presumed suffocation during pharyngitis in babies), the extraction of lower incisors (to prevent diarrhea), and the incision of eyelids (to prevent or cure conjunctivitis) are common. Circumcision is performed on almost all men and 90% of women. Ethiopians do bloodletting for moygnbagegn, a neurologic disease that includes fever and syncope.
Chest pain
is treated by cupping. Ethiopians often prefer injections to tablets. Bad news is usually given to families of patients and not the patients themselves. Zar is a form of spirit possession treated by a traditional healer negotiating with the alien spirit and giving gifts to the possessed patient. Health education must address Ethiopian concerns and customs.
...
PMID:Cross-cultural medicine and diverse health beliefs. Ethiopians abroad. 907 36
Two cases of esophagitis associated with the use of alendronate are described. Both patients were women with no past history of heartburn or
dyspepsia
, who started alendronate for postmenopausal osteoporosis at least one week before the symptoms onset, by taking the drug with half a glass of tap water at bedtime. The first patient suffered from a severe
chest pain
; endoscopy showed confluent erosions of the lower third of the esophagus. The second patient had odynophagia and developed exudates and greyish plaques on the mucosa of the upper third of the esophagus. Histological examination of the esophageal specimens of both patients disclosed no Monilia, hyphae, or nuclear viral inclusions. Both patients stopped alendronate with complete recovery at follow-up. A brief review of the etiopathogenesis of pill esophagitis is also presented. Finally, emphasis is placed on the selection of patients for therapy with alendronate with warnings on how to take the drug correctly.
...
PMID:[Alendronate-induced esophagitis. A report of 2 cases]. 924 56
An association between panic disorder and functional gastrointestinal disease has emerged since the introduction of reliable diagnostic criteria, first for psychiatric disorders and more recently for functional gastrointestinal disorders. At the same time, a more rigorous review of methodology of older reports linking structural gastrointestinal diseases such as peptic ulcer and inflammatory bowel disease to psychiatric illness has cast doubt on the validity of their association. In this review original articles reporting an association between panic disorder and globus, functional
chest pain
of presumed esophageal origin, functional
dyspepsia
, and irritable bowel syndrome are critically reviewed and it is concluded that panic disorder is overrepresented in noncardiac
chest pain
and irritable bowel syndrome. Original reports of the prevalence of panic disorder in structural gastrointestinal disease are reviewed and it is concluded that they do not support an association with panic. Hypotheses explaining the statistical link of panic disorder and functional gastrointestinal disease are discussed.
...
PMID:Panic disorder associated with gastrointestinal disease: review and hypotheses. 948 67
This study explores gender differences in symptom presentation associated with coronary heart disease (CHD). In this prospective study, nurse data collectors directly observed 550 patients as they presented to the Emergency Department (ED) of Yale-New Haven Hospital. The final sample included 217 patients (41% women) diagnosed with CHD (acute coronary ischemia or myocardial infarction).
Chest pain
was the most frequently reported symptom in women (70%) and men (71%). Unadjusted analyses revealed that women were more likely than men to present with midback pain (odds ratio [OR] 9.61, 95% confidence interval [CI] 2.10 to 44.11, p = 0.001), nausea and/or vomiting (OR 2.29, 95% CI 1.19 to 4.42, p = 0.012), dyspnea (OR 1.82, 95% CI 1.05 to 3.16, p = 0.032), palpitations (OR 3.42, 95% CI 1.02 to 11.47, p = 0.036), and
indigestion
(OR 2.13, 95% CI 1.03 to 4.44, p = 0.040). After adjustment for age and diabetes, women were more likely to present with nausea and/or vomiting (OR 2.43, 95% CI 1.23 to 4.79, p = 0.011) and
indigestion
(OR 2.13, 95% CI 1.10 to 4.53, p = 0.048). Women (30%) and men (29%) were equally likely to present without
chest pain
, and dyspnea was the most common non-
chest pain
symptom. In the subgroup of patients without
chest pain
, unadjusted analyses revealed that women were more likely to report nausea and/or vomiting compared with men (OR 4.40, 95% CI 1.30 to 14.84, p = 0.013). Although we found some significant gender differences in non-
chest pain
symptoms, we conclude that there were more similarities than differences in symptoms in women and men presenting to the ED with symptoms suggestive of CHD who were later diagnosed with CHD.
...
PMID:Gender differences in symptom presentation associated with coronary heart disease. 1046 75
Subtypes of functional
dyspepsia
(FD), including refluxlike
dyspepsia
, ulcerlike
dyspepsia
, dysmotility-like
dyspepsia
, and nonspecific
dyspepsia
, have been described and are widely used clinically. However, these symptom patterns often overlap, and the terms are insufficient for indicating all FD symptoms. In this study, we divided 71 FD patients into two groups: patients with or without pain. Group I, the pain
dyspepsia
group, included patients in whom the main symptoms were epigastralgia and/or
chest pain
. Group II, the painless
dyspepsia
group, included patients without pain, in whom the symptoms were nausea, vomiting, and heartburn. We examined the relationship between esophageal function and psychiatric factors in the test groups and compared them with a control group. Of the FD patients, 19.7% [8 (25%) of 32 group I patients, 6 (15.4%) of 39 group II patients] had esophageal motility disorders, such as nutcracker esophagus and diffuse esophageal spasm. The LES pressure of group I was higher than that of group II by esophageal manometry (P < 0.05). In 17 (53.1%) of 32 group I patients and 31 (79.5%) of 39 group II patients, psychiatric disorders (38.0% had depressive disorder and 21.1% had an anxiety disorder) were diagnosed following DSM III-R criteria. Group II tended to be more depressive than group I (P = 0.0508). Psychological assessment scores, STAI-I and STAI-II, were higher in groups I and II than in the control group (P < 0.001). Long-term distress, anxiety, and depression seem to influence the symptoms of FD patients. Esophageal dysmotility may be an important functional abnormality of FD.
...
PMID:Esophageal motility and psychiatric factors in functional dyspepsia patients with or without pain. 1054 63
This study examined the prevalence of functional gastrointestinal (FGI) disorders, and the association between FGI disorders and measures of affective distress, among a sample of 127 university students. Subjects completed a questionnaire battery including Research Diagnostic Questions for Functional Gastrointestinal Disorders, the Beck Anxiety Inventory, the Anxiety Sensitivity Index, the Beck Depression Inventory, and a medical utilization questionnaire. FGI disorders were diagnosed in 51.2% of the sample. Functional dyspepsia (22.8%), dyschezia (20.5%), functional heartburn (19.7%), functional
chest pain
(18.1%), and globus (12.6%) were the most frequently diagnosed disorders. Participants experiencing globus, functional
dyspepsia
, or functional heartburn showed significant differences in terms of anxiety, anxiety sensitivity, depression, and/or physician visits, when compared with participants without these disorders. Our results suggest that FGI disorders are strikingly prevalent among young adults, and specific FGI disorders are associated with affective distress. Implications of the observed association between psychological factors and FGI disorders are discussed.
...
PMID:Neurotic butterflies in my stomach: the role of anxiety, anxiety sensitivity and depression in functional gastrointestinal disorders. 1057 72
Dysphagia and
chest pain
are the two commonest symptoms of abnormalities of oesophageal motility. Dysphagia is to be distinguished into high or oropharyngeal and low or oesophageal dysphagia. Oropharyngeal dysphagia pertains to dysfunction of the pars cricopharyngea of the M. constrictor pharyngis inferior (M. cricopharyngeus), which is frequently associated with a Zenker diverticulum. Treatment consists of endoscopical or surgical myotomy and diverticulectomy. In achalasia there is incomplete relaxation of the lower esophageal sphincter with aperistalsis. The main treatment modalities are endoscopic pneumodilation and surgical myotomy of this sphincter. In dysphagia or non-cardiac
chest pain
spastic or hypocontractile abnormalities of the oesophageal motility can be involved, these are often difficult to treat. Disorders of gastric motility are mainly gastroparesis and functional
dyspepsia
. In diabetic gastroparesis, adequate monitoring of the blood sugar level is also necessary. New insights into the pathophysiology of functional
dyspepsia
concern abnormal visceral sensitivity and reduced adaptive relaxation of the stomach during intake of food.
...
PMID:[Gastrointestinal surgery and gastroenterology. VII. Proximal motility disorders in the digestive tract]. 1074 45
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