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Query: UMLS:C0013395 (
dyspepsia
)
4,879
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Antral biopsy specimens from 89 consecutive patients with nonulcer
dyspepsia
and erosive prepyloric changes included in a prospective, randomized, double-blind 4-wk study of the effect of an
aluminum
-magnesium antacid (120 mmol/day) or pirenzepine (50 mg b.i.d.) vs. placebo were examined histologically. Campylobacter pylori (CP) was found by light microscopy of silver-stained sections in 25 patients (28%). Campylobacter pylori-positive patients were on average older than CP-negative patients (p = 0.02). There was a strong association between CP colonization and acute inflammation (p less than 0.001), both being rare in the absence of chronic inflammation. During treatment with antacids, the density of CP decreased (p less than 0.001) without any improvement of the inflammatory reaction. On the contrary, the number of patients with gastritis tended to increase after antacids as compared with placebo (p less than 0.10). A separate analysis showed no symptomatic effect of the drugs. Thus, neither nonulcer
dyspepsia
nor erosive prepyloric changes are strongly associated with antral CP colonization or acute inflammation.
Aluminum
-magnesium antacids may suppress antral CP infection without healing the gastritis or relieving symptoms.
...
PMID:Antacids reduce Campylobacter pylori colonization without healing the gastritis in patients with nonulcer dyspepsia and erosive prepyloric changes. 329 81
Two patients with hypothyroidism treated for upper
dyspepsia
and constipation with
aluminum
hydroxide and magnesium oxide, respectively, presented a marked increase in the serum concentration of thyroid stimulating hormone and low serum thyroxine on a fixed dosage of levothyroxine. After discontinuation of antacids/laxatives, thyroid stimulating hormone was again reduced indicating interaction between levothyroxine and antacids/laxatives. In vitro studies revealed a dose-related increased adsorption of levothyroxine by addition of a combination of
aluminum
hydroxide, magnesium hydroxide and magnesium carbonate, while no connection between levothyroxine and the addition of magnesium oxide, alone, was found. This finding has major clinical consequences since 1) many patients are treated with levothyroxine, 2) most patients do not tell physicians that they take antacids/laxatives, and 3) consumption of antacids/laxatives in patients with levothyroxine-treated hypothyroidism may lead to serious undersubstitution with levothyroxine.
...
PMID:Intestinal adsorption of levothyroxine by antacids and laxatives: case stories and in vitro experiments. 1019 69
Antacids are commonly used self-prescribed medications. They consist of calcium carbonate and magnesium and
aluminum
salts in various compounds or combinations. The effect of antacids on the stomach is due to partial neutralisation of gastric hydrochloric acid and inhibition of the proteolytic enzyme, pepsin. Each cation salt has its own pharmacological characteristics that are important for determination of which product can be used for certain indications. Antacids have been used for duodenal and gastric ulcers, stress gastritis, gastro-oesophageal reflux disease, pancreatic insufficiency, non-ulcer
dyspepsia
, bile acid mediated diarrhoea, biliary reflux, constipation, osteoporosis, urinary alkalinisation and chronic renal failure as a dietary phosphate binder. The development of histamine H2-receptor antagonists and proton pump inhibitors has significantly reduced usage for duodenal and gastric ulcers and gastro-oesophageal reflux disease. However, antacids can still be useful for stress gastritis and non-ulcer
dyspepsia
. The recent release of proprietary H2 antagonists has likely further reduced antacid use for non-ulcer
dyspepsia
. Other indications are still valid but represent minor uses. Antacid drug interactions are well noted, but can be avoided by rescheduling medication administration times. This can be inconvenient and discourage compliance with other medications. All antacids can produce drug interactions by changing gastric pH, thus altering drug dissolution of dosage forms, reduction of gastric acid hydrolysis of drugs, or alter drug elimination by changing urinary pH. Most antacids, except sodium bicarbonate, may decrease drug absorption by adsorption or chelation of other drugs. Most adverse effects from antacids are minor with periodic use of small amounts. However, when large doses are taken for long periods of time, significant adverse effects may occur especially patients with underlying diseases such as chronic renal failure. These adverse effects can be reduced by monitoring of electrolyte status and avoiding
aluminum
-containing antacids to bind dietary phosphate in chronic renal failure. Antacids, although effective for discussed indications of duodenal and gastric ulcer and gastro-oesophageal reflux disease, have been replaced by newer, more effective agents that are more palatable to patients. Antacids are likely to continue to be used for non-ulcer
dyspepsia
, minor episodes of heartburn (gastro-oesophageal reflux disease) and other clear indications. Although their wide-spread use may decline, these drugs will still be used, and clinicians should be aware of their potential drug interactions and adverse effects.
...
PMID:Antacids revisited: a review of their clinical pharmacology and recommended therapeutic use. 1040 Apr 1
The frequency, symptoms, and complication rate of PUD seem to decrease during pregnancy. Yet clinicians often have to treat
dyspepsia
or pyrosis of undetermined origin during pregnancy because the frequency of pyrosis significantly increases during pregnancy, and clinicians reluctantly perform EGD during pregnancy for pyrosis to differentiate reliably between GERD and PUD.
Dyspepsia
or pyrosis during pregnancy is initially treated with dietary and lifestyle modifications. If the symptoms do not remit with these modifications, sucralfate or antacids, preferably magnesium-containing or
aluminum
-containing antacids, should be administered. Histamine2 receptor antagonists are recommended when symptoms are refractory to antacid or sucralfate therapy. Ranitidine seems to be a relatively safe H2 receptor antagonist. If symptoms continue despite H2 receptor antagonist therapy, the patient should be evaluated for possible EGD or PPI therapy. Pregnant women with hemodynamically significant upper gastrointestinal bleeding or other worrisome clinical findings should undergo EGD. Indications for surgery include ulcer perforation, ongoing active bleeding from an ulcer requiring transfusion of six or more units of packed erythrocytes, gastric outlet obstruction refractory to intense medical therapy, and a malignant gastric ulcer without evident metastases.
...
PMID:Gastric and duodenal ulcers during pregnancy. 1263 19
To appraise the efficiency of complemental antacid administration in preventing and reducing digestive disturbances during prolonged treatment with prednisone and prednisolone, 100 patients with active rheumatoid arthritis who were maintained on combined antacid and prednisone or prednisolone therapy for periods of one year or longer, were studied clinically and roentgenographically. Antacid therapy consisted of 300 mg. of dried
aluminum
hydroxide gel and 50 mg. of magnesium trisilicate taken with each 2.5 mg. dose of the steroids. Digestive symptoms, such as
indigestion
, heartburn, sour eructations, gnawing epigastric distress and the like, were experienced by 18 per cent of patients during treatment with prednisone or prednisolone combined with antacids. Among patients who had been maintained on the steroids without antacids beforehand, the incidence of digestive complaints was reduced from 38 per cent to 17 per cent by the addition of alkali therapy, and the severity of the distress decreased in others. Active peptic ulcers were detected roentgenographically in three of the 100 patients. In two instances the ulcers were asymptomatic and in two instances they were considered as reactivations of previously healed lesions. The incidence of active ulcers in this series was substantially lower than that reported by several investigators among patients treated with prednisone and prednisolone without the concomitant administration of alkalis. The size of dosage and individual susceptibility appeared to be important factors in the development of digestive disturbances from steroids. Results of the study indicated that the complemental use of antacids with each divided dose of steroid is highly effective in reducing the frequency and severity of digestive symptoms during prednisone and prednisolone administration. The low incidence (3 per cent) for roentgenographically demonstrable active lesions in the series suggests that the addition of acid-neutralizing agents during prolonged treatment with these steroids may afford at least partial protection against the development and reactivation of peptic ulcers.
...
PMID:Effectiveness of antacids in reducing digestive disturbances in patients treated with prednisone and prednisolone. 1358 44
Generally, gastric mucosal calcinosis (GMC) is only rarely encountered in routine biopsies. GMC may be classified as dystrophic, metastatic, or idiopathic. Metastatic calcification represents the most frequently encountered subtype, and refers to the deposition of calcium salts on largely normal tissues in the setting of an abnormal serum biochemical environment (hypercalcemia, hyperphosphatemia, and/or an elevated CaxPO4 product). In contrast, dystrophic calcification implies calcification in inflammed, fibrotic, or otherwise altered tissue in the setting of a normal biochemical environment. The gastric mucosa, along with the kidneys and lungs, are preferential sites for metastatic calcification, a finding that has been attributed to the relative intracellular alkalinity at these sites. In addition to the wide variety of hypercalcemia and/or hyperphosphatemia-causing clinical conditions, GMC has also been associated with atrophic gastritis, hypervitaminosis A, organ transplantation, gastric neoplasia, uremia with eucalcemia/euphosphatemia, and the use of
aluminum
-containing antacids, citrate-containing blood products, isotretinoin, and sucralfate. Although GMC has rarely been associated with epigastric pain and/or
dyspepsia
, most come to clinical attention owing to their accumulation of bone-seeking radiopharmaceuticals or represent a postmortem finding. The precise significance or mechanistic basis for GMC remains to be elucidated. However, their presence in gastric biopsies should be reported, as they may serve as an indicator for generalized metastatic calcification, especially in organs where they may be fatal, such as the heart. Furthermore, some examples of systemic calcification are reversible with normalization of biochemical parameters, which highlights the need for pathologists to report this finding when encountered in a premortem gastric biopsy.
...
PMID:Gastric mucosal calcinosis: clinicopathologic considerations. 1745 19