Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0013395 (dyspepsia)
4,879 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In a 15-day experiment six test subjects were exposed to a hyperbaric environment. Their actual food and water consumption was measured. The consumption of a diet with a caloric value of 3300--3500 kcal did not alter the body weight of exercising test subjects. During decompression the food consumption decreased. Certain food products caused dyspepsia. The total amount of consumed water was not more than 2500 ml/day.
...
PMID:[Human nutrition under hyperbarism]. 24 87

Using real-time ultrasonography, we monitored gastric emptying indirectly in 26 cases of non-ulcer dyspepsia (NUD) and 13 healthy adults by determining the anteroposterior gastric measurement of a single section of the stomach in the corpus fundus immediately after drinking 500 ml water and then every 10 min. for five times. The average time for 50% gastric emptying in NUD patients (36.46 +/- 13.13, x +/- s) was longer than that in healthy adults (23.54 +/- 5.93), but the half time of gastric emptying in male with NUD was not significantly different as compared with that in male controls and female patients of NUD.
...
PMID:[Measurement of gastric emptying in non-ulcer dyspepsia]. 130 55

A prospective case controlled study was conducted to evaluate the role of fluoride as a possible aetiological factor for non-ulcer dyspepsia (NUD). Twenty patients with NUD and 10 age and sex matched healthy controls were subjected to clinical evaluation, upper gastrointestinal endoscopy and biopsies from the gastric antrum and duodenum. The antral and duodenal mucosa was subjected to a rapid urease test for Helicobacter pylori and histological and electron microscopic examinations. Fluoride levels in the drinking water, serum and urine were estimated using a ION 85 ion-analyser. These levels were significantly higher in patients with NUD than in controls (P less than 0.05). Histological abnormalities in the antral and duodenal mucosa were seen in 14 patients (70%) with NUD and 1 control subject (10%) (P less than 0.05). Electron microscopic abnormalities in the mucosal cells were seen in all patients with NUD but in none of the controls (P less than 0.01). The fluoride levels in serum and urine correlated with the symptoms, histological and electron microscopic abnormalities (P less than 0.05). It was concluded that chronic exposure to fluoride may result in NUD and should be considered in patients where other known cause of dyspepsia have been excluded.
...
PMID:Fluoride as a possible aetiological factor in non-ulcer dyspepsia. 151 58

Physiological gallbladder contraction, delivering bile salts during meals, plays a key role in digestive mechanisms. A bicarbonate-alkaline water (Uliveto) shows a positive effect on gallbladder kinetics: so it may be useful in order to improve dyspepsia due to delayed gallbladder emptying.
...
PMID:[Evaluation of the efficacy of bicarbonate-alkaline water action on gallbladder motility]. 154 24

A layer of water-insoluble mucus gel is secreted by the gastric epithelium, and is believed to form an important barrier to acid injury. It is postulated that Helicobacter pylori can alter pH gradients by damaging the mucus layer, but no data on pH gradients in vivo in patients with H. pylori gastritis have been published. We aimed to construct a map of mucus-bicarbonate layer pH gradients in health and disease. Fourteen healthy asymptomatic volunteers (mean age, 46 yr) and 14 symptomatic patients with non-ulcer dyspepsia (NUD) (mean age, 46 yr) were studied. A flexible pH microelectrode was passed through the biopsy channel of an endoscope; luminal readings and three mucosal surface pH readings were obtained from each of five specific gastric sites (fundus greater curve, body greater curve, antrum greater curve, antrum lesser curve, and antrum anterior wall) using standardized methodology. Gradients at each site were calculated (mean juxta mucosal pH minus luminal pH); pH electrode accuracy was tested in standard buffer solutions. Biopsies were obtained from each site to assess for H. pylori status. Among asymptomatic volunteers, 21% had H. pylori; in NUD, 50% were infected. There was a significant association between H. pylori and histological gastritis at each site. The overall mean (+/- SE) pH gradients in H. pylori-positive and -negative cases were similar, being 5.35 (+/- 0.06) and 5.26 (+/- 0.07), respectively. There was also no significant correlation between the histological gastritis score and the pH gradient at each gastric site. The pH gradients in healthy subjects (mean 5.31) and NUD (mean 5.29) were not significantly different. We conclude that pH gradients appear to remain stable throughout the stomach in healthy subjects and NUD, independent of H. pylori gastritis.
...
PMID:Stability of pH gradients in vivo across the stomach in Helicobacter pylori gastritis, dyspepsia, and health. 159 45

Helicobacter pylori seeks gastric mucosa, whether found in the stomach, duodenum, or Barrett's esophagus. Definitive diagnosis can be secured by appropriate stains of mucosal biopsies and culture, but the rapid urease test, breath isotope studies, and serologic testing are also useful. The frequency of colonization increases with advancing age, but infection occurs earlier in underdeveloped countries. Although the reservoir is uncertain, water or food transmission seems likely. There is sufficient evidence to assign an etiologic role to the bacteria in the causation of type B antral gastritis. H. pylori is found in areas of gastric metaplasia within the duodenum and is associated with duodenitis. Although acute infection leads to hypochlorhydria, chronic colonization has little effect on acid secretion. Studies have thus far failed to establish a convincing relationship between H. pylori and nonulcer dyspepsia, although the bacteria may play a role in selected patients. H. pylori is found in association with most idiopathic gastric and duodenal ulcers, but it is unclear as to whether the bacteria plays a causative or permissive role. The organism has a predilection for intercellular spaces and the mucous layer, thus affording relative isolation from luminally active antibiotics. Monotherapy with bismuth preparations transiently eliminates the bacteria, but recolonization is rapid, probably due to regrowth of sequestered organisms. A combination of metronidazole, bismuth, and tetracycline (or amoxicillin) affords the best eradication rate, but the potential side effects of this program should be considered. The present therapy of duodenal ulcer disease is effective and without significant risk. Treatment of H. pylori should be reserved for those patients who relapse on adequate maintenance therapy. If a safe and effective antibiotic becomes available, more frequent testing and earlier treatment intervention may become more attractive. H. pylori is probably an "innocent bystander" for most patients, but the bacteria may sufficiently impair the defenses of the antral and duodenal mucosa to facilitate the development and relapse of ulcer disease in subsets of patients.
...
PMID:Helicobacter pylori: aggressor or innocent bystander? 207 88

The effect of the new gastrokinetic agent cisapride on gastric emptying was evaluated in 17 dyspeptic patients using the dual radionuclide technique. Eight patients with idiopathic dyspepsia and nine postsurgical dyspeptic patients were studied and compared to a control group. Gastric emptying of solids and liquids was determined after ingestion of a standardized meal using 99mTc-sulfur colloid scrambled eggs as the solid phase and [111In]DTPA-labeled water as the liquid phase. Following a basal study and on a separate occasion, each patient received an intravenous bolus of 10 mg of cisapride after ingestion of the test meal; 10 of the patients were restudied after a two-week period of chronic oral administration of the drug (10 mg four times a day). Baseline gastric emptying of solids was significantly delayed in idiopathic and postsurgical patients; liquid emptying was only delayed in the postsurgical group. Intravenous and oral administration of cisapride significantly shortened gastric emptying in both groups. In all but one patient, the clinical improvement was confirmed by the test. Cisapride appears to be a good alternative to metoclopramide and domperiodone in the treatment of dyspeptic patients. The dual radionuclide technique appears to be a useful physiologic tool for evaluating and predicting the efficacy of a gastric prokinetic therapy in man.
...
PMID:Effect of cisapride on gastric emptying in dyspeptic patients. 337 73

Campylobacter pylori, a gram-negative microaerophilic bacterium, has been implicated in the genesis of human gastritis, dyspepsia, and gastroduodenal ulceration. Previous attempts to reproduce the diseases in conventional laboratory animal species have been unsuccessful. To determine if neonatal gnotobiotic piglets were susceptible to C. pylori, we orally challenged two litters (n = 17) with 10(9) CFU after pretreating them with cimetidine. Controls housed in separate units received nothing or peptone water alone. Piglets were examined 1, 2, 3, and 4 weeks after challenge. Colonization by the bacterium and inflammation of the gastric mucosa persisted throughout the study period. Organisms were revealed by Warthin-Starry silver stain to reside between the mucus layer and the gastric epithelium. Culturing of samples from sites along the gastrointestinal tract revealed that the bacterium colonized essentially only the gastric and proximal duodenal mucosae. Gross pathological changes were restricted to the stomachs of infected piglets and consisted of submucosal edema, increased gastric mucus production, and progressive development of mucosal lymphoid follicles. Microscopic lesions consisted of transient neutrophilic infiltrates followed by diffuse and follicular infiltrations of mononuclear leukocytes into the mucosa and submucosa. Alcian blue-periodic acid-Schiff stains suggested that the infection resulted in the depletion of mucopolysaccharide production by deep gastric glands. These data indicate that gnotobiotic piglets reproduce many of the features of diseases associated with C. pylori in humans.
...
PMID:Establishment of gastric Campylobacter pylori infection in the neonatal gnotobiotic piglet. 366 63

Ingestion of sodium bicarbonate has been implicated as one of the proximate causes of spontaneous gastric rupture. However, the volume and rate of gas released from the reaction of ingested sodium bicarbonate and gastric acid has not been previously studied in detail. We, therefore, developed an in vitro method for measuring gas release after addition of sodium bicarbonate to a solution containing hydrochloric acid. From the results of our studies, we conclude that even though hydrochloric acid and sodium bicarbonate react instantaneously, the resulting gas production is slow, mainly because CO2 produced from the dehydration of carbonic acid dissolves in water and is only slowly released into the gas phase. The major exogenous factors that determine the rate of gas release are the volume of the solution, the quantity of reactants, the air volume over the reaction mixture, the partial pressure of CO2 of the acid solution before the addition of bicarbonate, and the stirring rate. The presence of food, alcohol, and carbonic anhydrase had relatively little if any effect. Based on our results, we believe that ingestion of the recommended dose of sodium bicarbonate (one-half teaspoon) would result in only small amounts of sudden gas release, probably not enough to be an important factor in causing spontaneous gastric rupture. On the other hand, we measured the amount of sodium bicarbonate that people actually select to take for indigestion, and all exceeded the recommended dose. Some people selected doses of bicarbonate that would result in several hundred milliliters of gas release within 3 min; it seems likely that such injudicious ingestion of sodium bicarbonate, if taken when the stomach was distended with air, food, and liquid, could be an important factor in spontaneous gastric rupture.
...
PMID:Gas production after reaction of sodium bicarbonate and hydrochloric acid. 609 Feb 55

[13C]Acetate and [13C]octanoate breath tests were used to analyze the gastric emptying of liquids and solids in healthy controls and patients with functional dyspepsia both with and without cisapride. A standard test meal was labeled with either 150 mg [13C]acetate (liquid phase labeled in the water) or with 100 mg [13C]octanoate (solid phase labeled in the egg yolk). Six patients with dyspepsia and six healthy controls underwent a 4-hr breath test four times, ie, both the [13C]acetate and [13C]octanoate test with and without cisapride. Duplicate [13C]acetate or [13C]octanoate breath tests were performed in another 12 healthy controls in order to assess day-to-day variability of gastric emptying for liquids and solids. The mass spectrometric data were fitted to a power exponential function allowing mathematical analysis of half-emptying times and lag times. In patients with dyspepsia, gastric half emptying times of solids were significantly delayed as compared to the emptying of solids in the controls (203 +/- 41 vs 148 +/- 35 min; P < 0.05). With cisapride, gastric emptying of solids was significantly accelerated (P < 0.05) both in the patients (166 +/- 58 min) and in the controls (117 +/- 27 min). The gastric emptying of liquids did not differ in patients and controls, and cisapride had no effect on the emptying of liquids within the normal range. In the healthy controls, half emptying times both for liquids and solids were reproducible on the two different days (CVintra: 5.58% for liquids, 20.01% for solids).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Influence of cisapride on gastric emptying of solids and liquids monitored by 13C breath tests. 758 90


1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>