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Query: UMLS:C0014848 (
achalasia
)
2,804
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We report the results of a randomized prospective study comparing a standard bougie rubber balloon dilator [
Brown
-McHardy (BMH)] and a newer polyethylene dilator passed over a guide wire [Microvasive Rigiflex (MVR)]. Twenty
achalasia
patients (15M, 5F, mean age 45.4 yr) considered candidates for either dilator were randomized. Symptom assessment, body weight, and upright radionuclide solid esophageal emptying study were measured before and 6 months after pneumatic dilatation. All dilatations were performed by one of three experienced gastroenterologists under fluoroscopic guidance. Overall success occurred with 10/10 BMH and 7/10 MVR. One patient not improved with MVR had myotomy; the other two were successfully treated by BMH. No complications occurred with either dilator.
...
PMID:Prospective randomized comparison of Brown-McHardy and microvasive balloon dilators in treatment of achalasia. 222 Jul 22
The therapeutic approach to children with
achalasia
of the esophagus is controversial. Both pneumatic dilatation (PD) and Heller esophageal myotomy (EM) are considered effective, while bougienage has been discarded by most authorities. To determine the best place for each in the therapy of
achalasia
, 19 cases treated since 1964 were reviewed. Ages ranged from 9 months to 17 years (median 11 years), and duration of symptoms ranged from 4 months to 8 years (median 1 year). Three patients had symptoms from infancy. Two patients underwent a successful EM as their sole procedure. Two underwent bougienage as their initial therapy. Dysphagia recurred quickly and both required operation. Fifteen underwent PD under intravenous sedation with a
Brown
-McHardy dilator placed under fluoroscopy. Seven underwent a single dilatation; seven underwent two; and one underwent four. Relief of dysphagia was achieved in 11 patients, but four required surgery. The patients who experienced adequate relief with dilatation alone were clinically identical to those in whom it failed with respect to age, race, sex, symptom duration, and manometric data. Those who required EM following PD experienced only a brief period of relief following PD (median 1 month) compared with those who enjoyed lasting results (median 18 months). Three patients suffered prolonged chest pain or fever following PD, but without esophageal leakage and with full recovery. Two of eight operative patients developed late postoperative reflux. There were no deaths. Both PD and EM are safe and effective treatments for
achalasia
. Our results indicate that dilatation is the logical first therapeutic step, but rapid recurrence of symptoms may identify those patients who will require operative myotomy.
...
PMID:Pneumatic dilatation and operative treatment of achalasia in children. 361 56
Forty-one (98%) of 42 patients with
achalasia
of the esophagus had pneumatic dilatation performed successfully using the
Brown
-McHardy dilator. One to four dilatations (mean, 1.9) were done on each patient with inflation pressures of 8-15 psi (mean, 11.1 psi). Immediately after the procedure, all patients were examined radiographically by injection of contrast material into the lower esophagus through a nasoesophageal tube. Two immediate and two delayed perforations occurred. Six intramural hematomas were noted, five of which resolved spontaneously. The luminal diameter at the esophagogastric junction increased from a mean of 4.2 mm before dilatation to 7.5 mm following treatment. Four patients with previous Heller myotomy were dilated without complications. Perforation was more common in patients with a minimal change in the esophagogastric diameter. Thirty-five patients (85%) improved symptomatically within several days following pneumatic dilatation. Excluding patients with perforation, the postdilatation appearance of the lower esophagus poorly correlated with clinical response.
...
PMID:Radiographic evaluation of esophagus immediately after pneumatic dilatation for achalasia. 362 90
We describe a 65-yr-old man with
achalasia
, who had two previous Heller myotomies. He had a markedly dilated, tortuous esophagus, which defeated initial attempts at pneumatic dilatation. A method was improvised in which a
Brown
-McHardy dilator was attached by a string to a small caliber endoscope and both were successfully passed into the stomach. Pneumatic dilatation was then easily performed. Review of the literature and our experience with four patients suggests that pneumatic dilatation can be performed without substantial risk in patients after a failed Heller myotomy.
...
PMID:Pneumatic dilatation of the achalasic esophagus requiring the aid of an endoscope. 379 84