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:C0014848 (
achalasia
)
2,804
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We report the case of a patient with a gastric remnant relapse of an antral
carcinoma
resected 5 years before and presenting with the clinical feature of a secondary
achalasia
(pseudoachalasia). In spite of the patient's 4-month history of dysphagia and weight loss that suggested a malignant lesion, barium swallow, repeated endoscopic biopsies and computed tomography (CT) scan of the upper abdomen did not reveal any abnormalities to indicate a recurrence. However, in the following months, because of worsening symptoms, a further CT scan was performed and revealed thickening of the cardia and gastric wall. The patient underwent an exploratory laparotomy that showed an unresectable lesion involving the gastric fundus, the diaphragm and penetrating into the mediastinum, and therefore a palliative jejunostomy was performed.
...
PMID:Recurrent gastric carcinoma causing pseudoachalasia: case report. 1100 39
The purpose of the present paper was to determine if pharyngeal or cervical oesophageal lesions may present with distal symptoms. All patients presenting for barium swallow underwent examination of the pharynx and oesophagus. The pharyngeal examination included spot films of the pharynx as well as views of the pharyngo-oesophageal segment filmed at three frames per second. During the 18-month period of the present study interrogations were carried out to identify patients without symptoms in the cervical or suprasternal region. One hundred and twelve patients were identified; 58 were male and 54 were female. The age range was 18-84 years. Examinations revealed abnormalities within the pharynx in 42 patients (38%); of this group of 42, 34 also had an oesophageal abnormality. The majority of the pharyngeal findings were minor. There were, however, three patients who each had a pharyngeal abnormality (pharyngeal
carcinoma
, obstructive cricopharyngeal narrowing, pharyngo-oesophageal junction stricture) as well as an oesophageal lesion (hiatal hernia,
achalasia
, reflux oesophagitis), either of which may have been the source of the symptoms. The remaining eight patients (7%) of this group of 42 with detected pharyngeal abnormality had normal oesophageal examinations. Most of these were again minor changes and were unlikely to be significant. There was, however, one patient in whom the only abnormality was an infiltrative cancer of the posterior wall of the pharyngo-oesophageal junction. In conclusion, the identification of patients in the present study with pharyngeal lesions and without distal abnormal findings indicates that a proximal lesion may present with downstream symptoms. Furthermore, there were also patients in whom the examination found abnormalities in multiple segments of the pharynx and oesophagus. We suggest that examination of the pharynx is warranted as part of the barium swallow in patients without cervical or suprasternal symptoms.
...
PMID:Value of pharyngography in patients without suprasternal symptoms. 1110 36
Although adenocarcinoma of the cardia is extremely rare in adolescent patients, the endoscopist should be alert to this disease in patients of any age with dysphagia, even if symptoms, and results of a barium study, upper endoscopy, and esophageal manometry are suggestive of primary
achalasia
, especially if family history is negative for
achalasia
. In addition, secondary
achalasia
should be suspected in patients who do not respond to therapy with botulinum toxin within 2 months. Because none of the mentioned tests can distinguish between primary
achalasia
and secondary forms due to
carcinoma
of the cardia, biopsy specimens should be obtained. It appears that, although there is a minimal risk for complications, a diagnostic procedure such as biopsy would be appropriate when the information obtained could be essential. In some cases EUS can be an additional diagnostic tool, because lesions of the submucosa and the surrounding area can be identified by EUS.
...
PMID:Gastric adenocarcinoma mimicking achalasia in a 15-year-old patient: a case report and review of the literature. 1117 37
Achalasia
of the esophagus is a benign disease caused by dyskinesia of the lower esophagus and cardia and is presumed to be a premalignant lesion leading to an increased risk of squamous cell carcinoma. We analyzed six surgically or endoscopically resected carcinomas among 54 cases of
esophageal achalasia
using histological and immunohistochemical procedures. The mean interval between the diagnosis of
achalasia
and
carcinoma
was 21.5 years. Four of the six cases were superficial early-stage cancers whilst the other two were advanced cancers invading the adventitia. Histological mapping of the resected esophageal specimens demonstrated marked hyperplastic changes of stratified squamous epithelium and multiple foci of dysplastic changes. The squamous cell carcinomas showed well-differentiated type with low-grade atypia, closely associated with dysplastic foci. Immunohistochemical staining for p53, p21, p16 and epidermal growth factor receptor suggested that the dysplastic epithelium was a borderline lesion between hyperplasia and in situ
carcinoma
. Our observations suggested that esophageal food stasis induces chronic hyperplastic esophagitis and eventually malignant transformation of esophageal epithelial cells, associated with dysplasia-
carcinoma
sequence.
...
PMID:Clinicopathological studies of esophageal carcinoma in achalasia: analyses of carcinogenesis using histological and immunohistochemical procedures. 1126 44
Laparoscopic surgery of the upper gastrointestinal tract is nowadays associated with little morbidity and mortality. Cardiomyotomy with semifundoplication for management of
achalasia
and the various forms of fundoplication for treatment of reflux syndrome have proved beneficial and have largely replaced conventional surgery. Independent of the operative approach, it has not yet been established with certainty whether gastroesophageal reflux can best be prevented by 360 degrees fundoplication or semifundoplication. A perforated peptic ulcer can be treated effectively by laparoscopic overstitching of omental patch-plasty, although the superiority of the laparoscopic method has yet to be proved. Benign lesions and early malignancies are currently resected laparoscopically, but the role of laparoscopy in the curative treatment of advanced gastric
carcinoma
remains to be clarified. Diagnostic laparoscopy is used to avoid unnecessary laparotomy in inoperable cancer and to ascertain whether neoadjuvant therapy is indicated in advanced gastric
carcinoma
.
...
PMID:[Laparoscopic surgery of the upper gastrointestinal tract]. 1135 25
Reported incidence rates of
carcinoma
in patients with
achalasia
and the prevalence of
achalasia
in patients with esophageal cancer vary widely in the literature. The prognosis of an "achalasia-carcinoma" is generally considered poor, although systematic studies assessing the incidence, prevalence, and prognosis of patients with "achalasia-carcinoma" are scant. We investigated the incidence of esophageal cancer in a large series of patients with known
achalasia
, assessed the prevalence of
achalasia
in patients presenting with esophageal cancer, and evaluated the prognosis of these patients compared to that of patients with esophageal cancer without
achalasia
. Between 1982 and 1998 a total of 124 patients with primary
achalasia
were treated and followed at our department. During the same time period 1366 patients presented with esophageal cancer (879 esophageal squamous cell carcinomas, 487 adenocarcinomas). Of the 124 patients with primary
achalasia
, 4 developed a
carcinoma
during a mean follow-up of 5.6 years (i.e., an incidence of one
carcinoma
per 173.6 patient-years of follow-up). Altogether, 13 of 879 patients (1.5%) presenting with esophageal squamous cell carcinoma and 1 of 487 patients (0.2%), presenting with esophageal adenocarcinoma had a history of primary
achalasia
. Seven patients with
achalasia
-
carcinoma
(50%) had early-stage disease (stage I, IIA, or IIB). There was no difference in the prognosis of patients with resected
achalasia
-
carcinoma
versus those with esophageal
carcinoma
but no
achalasia
. Thus in our population of patients with long-standing
achalasia
the risk for developing an esophageal cancer was increased about 140-fold over that of the general population. With liberal use of surveillance,
carcinoma
could often be detected at an early stage in these patients, with a prognosis that was not worse than that of patients with squamous cell esophageal cancer but no
achalasia
.
...
PMID:Achalasia and esophageal cancer: incidence, prevalence, and prognosis. 1137 10
Pseudoachalasia is an esophageal motor disorder usually associated with malignancy that has clinical, radiographic, and manometric findings that are often indistinguishable from primary
achalasia
. There are few reports examining the histologic features of the associated neoplasms and their relationship with the esophageal myenteric plexus. We studied the clinical and pathologic features of 13 cases of pseudoachalasia seen at our institution between 1979 and 1999. Detailed clinical and radiographic data were obtained from medical records. In all cases available histologic material was reviewed to confirm the presence and type of associated neoplasm. When possible, the relationship of the neoplasm to the esophageal myenteric plexus was examined. In selected cases immunohistochemical stains were performed to further evaluate this relationship. All patients had clinical, radiographic, and manometric features similar to primary
achalasia
. The cohort included seven men and six women, age range 24-79 years (median 61 years). Associated neoplasms included esophageal adenocarcinoma arising in Barrett's esophagus (n = 1), adenocarcinoma of the esophagogastric junction (n = 7), metastatic renal cell carcinoma to the esophagogastric junction (n = 1), breast adenocarcinoma (n = 1), pulmonary small cell
carcinoma
(n = 1), pleural malignant mesothelioma (n = 1), and mediastinal fibrosis (n = 1). The mechanism of pseudoachalasia was consistent with neoplastic infiltration of the esophageal myenteric plexus in 11 cases. Neoplastic cells surrounded myenteric ganglion cells, which appeared normal in number and morphology. In the patient with pulmonary small cell
carcinoma
, there was no evidence of neoplastic infiltration of the esophagogastric junction, and anti-ANNA-1 antibody was detected, suggesting a paraneoplastic syndrome. Tissue obtained at the time of esophagomyotomy revealed lymphocytic myenteric inflammation and marked depletion of ganglion cells identical to that seen in primary
achalasia
. The mechanism pseudoachalasia in the patient with breast adenocarcinoma is uncertain, as there was no evidence of direct involvement of the esophagogastric junction. In summary, we describe 13 cases of pseudoachalasia resulting in a clinical syndrome indistinguishable from primary
achalasia
. The most common mechanism is direct involvement of the esophageal myenteric plexus by neoplastic cells. Rarely, a distant neoplasm may cause this syndrome as a paraneoplastic process.
...
PMID:The pathogenesis of pseudoachalasia: a clinicopathologic study of 13 cases of a rare entity. 1202 84
Carcinoma
of the esophagus is frequently diagnosed in advanced clinical stages. When an esophagic
carcinoma
has infiltrated the submucosa or the muscular or serosa, metastases are a common finding. Thus, early diagnosis and opportune treatment are vital for patients with this type of neoplasm. Timely diagnosis can be done through endoscopic or X-ray studies and confirmed through a histopathological study by directed biopsy. We presently report the case of a 65 year old man with precedents of
achalasia
who underwent an endoscopic study using the Lugol staining technique for suspected malignant lesion classified as 0-IIc. After two biopsies it was diagnosed as early carcinoma of the esophagus and was subjected to mucosectomy. Histopathological findings are reviewed at architectural and cellular level and are essential to establish the diagnosis of early neoplastic lesions of the esophagus epithelium. These cellular changes are corroborated by immunohistochemical studies with nuclear expression of p53. The relevant literature was reviewed and experiences by Japanese and North American pathologists compared with emphasis on the need for multidisciplinary management to make an early diagnosis by endoscopic studies, Lugol staining, X-rays, biopsy and conservative treatment based on mucosectomy.
...
PMID:Histopathological diagnosis of biopsy samples from early esophageal carcinoma. 1263 12
Secondary
achalasia
or pseudoachalasia is mostly caused by gastric or oesophageal
carcinoma
. Here we report a case of pseudoachalasia caused by a pancreatic tumour invading the cardiac region. A 66-year-old man with a 2-month history of dysphagia and weight loss showed no abnormalities on upper gastrointestinal endoscopy and computed tomography scan, but had no swallow-induced relaxation on oesophageal manometry. Based on the patient's history and oesophageal manometry findings, further investigation was performed to exclude pseudoachalasia. Endoscopic ultrasonography showed abnormalities in the cardiac region, but large endoscopic biopsies showed no malignancy. A laparotomy was performed, which revealed a large, irresectable tumour originating from the pancreatic corpus region and expanding into the gastric cardia region. This case illustrates that a pancreatic tumour invading the cardiac region may present as pseudoachalasia.
...
PMID:Pseudoachalasia caused by pancreatic carcinoma. 1281 15
The time interval between ingestion and regurgitation and the stage of digestion in regurgitated food may be factors helpful in diagnosing disease of the esophagus. In most cases diagnosis can be made by x-ray alone, but where x-ray evidence is insufficient esophagoscopy is often justified.X-ray investigation for foreign bodies should include films of the neck. Cough is a common symptom of the presence of foreign bodies; obstruction may result from inflammation or edema. Perforation is most often caused by foreign bodies or by instrumentation. Esophagoscopy is hazardous in this condition and the findings are not likely to affect the course of treatment. Hiatal hernia, although probably occurring to some degree in 10 per cent of adults, seldom causes symptoms. Inflammation resulting from hernial obstruction may be mistaken for
carcinoma
. Esophageal carcinoma occurs most frequently in elderly persons and in men more than in women. Operation is necessary in many cases to prevent starvation. The postoperative mortality rate is as low as 11 to 24 per cent, and the proportion of five-year survivals is increasing.
Achalasia
or
cardiospasm
can generally be recognized by x-ray appearance. Bouginage is the usual treatment, but operation may be necessary. Late regurgitation of food is a common symptom of esophageal diverticulum. Atresia in a newborn infant is a dangerous condition. The effect of any of the four types of anomaly is the same: diversion of fluids from the stomach to the bronchi. Coughing, choking and cyanosis are the common symptoms in a newborn infant. Hematemesis may arise from a number of causes; esophageal hemorrhage most commonly is owing to varicosity from portal hypertension. Esophagoscopy is the quickest and safest method of determining whether hematemesis is of esophageal origin.
...
PMID:Differential diagnosis of operable disease of the esophagus. 1305 38
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>