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Query: UMLS:C0014848 (achalasia)
2,804 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

An unusual, characteristic case of etiopathic achalasia of the esophagus is reported and the literature is reviewed. This disease has not previously been reported in the dental literature, but is well-known in the medical field. The case report illustrates the salient features of previosuly described achalasia in adults: vague history of asthma with respiratory symptoms of wheezing, obstruction to swallowing, regurgitation, intermittent pain, and peripheral neuritis in a thin patient who claims to be a light eater. The primary concern of the oral surgeon is the management of nutrition. In the case reported, to ingest food. After mobilization of the jaws, the patient could not longer eat the small amounts she could preoperatively. Suspected achalasiactic symptoms should be investigated thoroughly through proper work-up to rule out this disorder before elective surgery is performed. In nonelective cases, the practitioner must be prepared to manage the problems and complications and obtain the proper consultations.
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PMID:Esophageal achalasia after maxillofacial surgery. 28 92

Fifty-eight patients with angina-like chest pain had esophageal manometric testing. Forty-three had no evidence of coronary artery disease at the time of referral or at subsequent contact; 15 patients were proven to have coronary artery disease. High-amplitude contraction waves were the most frequently found manometric abnormality (15 patients). Less frequent were increased duration of contractions, achalasia, and diffuse esophageal spasm; the latter was present in only 3 patients. An approach to the interpretation of information obtained during manometry is presented. Using this approach, the esophagus was strongly implicated as the cause of the pain in 20 patients and was suspect in 18 others. Seven patients had results that exonerated the esophagus, and in the 13 remaining individuals, the esophagus was probably not the offending organ.
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PMID:Esophageal manometrics in patients with angina-like chest pain. 40 71

A survey of 102 patients with achalasia of the cardia treated by cardiomyotomy is reported. The technique of operation was unchanged throughout and the patients were followed up for a maximum of 22 years. Only 6 patients (5.8 per cent) developed renewed symptoms of reflux and 7 patients (6.8 per cent) had peptic strictures. Over 80 per cent of the patients had no dysphagia or regurgitation postoperatively, but 61 per cent still complained of achalasic pain. The development of mucosal hernias after cardiomyotomy and the use of drinking times in the assessment of outflow at the cardia are discussed.
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PMID:Results of Heller's operation for achalasia of the cardia. 66 43

Functional disroders are the most important cause for complaints in the gastrointestinal tract. Dysfunction may concern one or more physiologic properties like tonus, motility, secretion, sometimes also resorption and digestion, or their interaction. Functional disorders of the esophagus (esophagospasm and achalasia) become manifest as dysphagia. Halitosis, bad taste, burning tongue, and flatulent abdomen are frequent symptoms of functional disorders of the gastrointestinal tract. Irritable bowel syndrome is probably the functional disorder most freqently found in the gastrointestinal tract. Characteristic symptoms are pain in the lower and upper middle abdominal region, obstipation and/or diarrhea, flatulent abdomen, mucous discharge with the stools and urgent defecation with cramps relieved after discharge. Prognosis quoad vitam is good, the course, however, is subject to many changes. Therapie is symptomatic. Diagnostic and psychotherapeutic measures are intended to help remove carcinophobia and to overcome conflicts and fears.
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PMID:[Functional disorders of the gastrointestinal tract (author's transl)]. 68 14

Anal fissures belong to the autonomic diseases. A raised sympathicotonus (spasm dystrophy) is responsible for the origin, the poor healing tendency and the burning pain. This excessive effect of the sympathetic leads first to functional and later to organic disorders of the sphincter in the form of an achalasia. The empirically developed methods of operation have intervention in the autonomic nervous system in common, and only differ in the extent of this "invasion of the autonomic". Functional changes must be treated with local anesthetics or by stretching the sphincter, organic changes by sphincterotomy.
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PMID:[Sphincter surgery. Etiology and therapy of the anal fissure (author's transl)]. 82 52

The authors treated 17 patients with achalasia by a thoracoscopic (15 patients) or laparoscopic (2 patients) Heller myotomy. All patients had dysphagia and an upper gastrointestinal series demonstrating a dilated esophagus with a bird-beak deformity at the cardia. Manometry showed a mean lower esophageal sphincter (LES) pressure of 32 +/- 4 mmHg, incomplete sphincter relaxation on swallowing, and no primary esophageal peristalsis. After operation, mean LES pressure was 10 +/- 2 mmHg. Fifteen patients were fed on the second postoperative day. The average hospital stay was 3 days, and there were no deaths or major complications. In three early patients, the myotomy was not carried far enough onto the stomach, and dysphagia persisted until a second myotomy was performed (laparoscopically in two patients). The authors found that having an endoscope in the esophagus during the operation facilitated exposure and was vital to determine the appropriate length of the myotomy. With regard to dysphagia, final results were excellent in 12 patients (70%), good in two patients (12%), fair in two patients (12%), and poor in one patient (6%). Heller myotomy can be safely and reliably performed with minimally invasive techniques. Dysphagia is relieved, postoperative pain is minimal, hospital stay is short, and the patient can return quickly to normal activity.
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PMID:Thoracoscopic esophagomyotomy. Initial experience with a new approach for the treatment of achalasia. 141 78

Vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) is believed to be an inhibitory neurotransmitter responsible for lower esophageal sphincter (LES) relaxation. In patients with achalasia the concentration of VIP and the number of VIP-containing nerve fibers are reduced or absent. It has been suggested that the response to low-frequency transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation (TENS) may be mediated by a nonadrenergic noncholinergic pathway in which the release of VIP is responsible for the smooth muscle relaxation. The present study was designed to evaluate the effect of TENS on LES pressure and on VIP plasma concentrations in six patients with achalasia (five female, one male). TENS was performed daily during one week for 45-min sessions with a pocket stimulator that delivered low-frequency pulses (6.5 Hz), at 10 pulses/sec of 0.1-msec duration at intensities of 10-20 mA until rhythmic flexion of the fingers was obtained without producing pain. LES pressure and VIP levels were obtained before TENS, after the first 45-min session, and after a week of daily stimulation. After 45-min, TENS produced a significant reduction (P less than 0.01) in LES resting pressure from the mean value 56 +/- 6.4 mm Hg to 42.3 +/- 6.4 mm Hg; with LES relaxation improvement from 50.6 +/- 3% to 63.1 +/- 3.2% (P less than 0.01). After one week of daily TENS, an additional reduction in LES resting pressure (40.3 +/- 4 mm Hg) was observed (P less than 0.01).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation decreases lower esophageal sphincter pressure in patients with achalasia. 186 93

Clinical and manometric data from 13 elderly subjects with idiopathic achalasia (mean age 79 +/- 2 years) were compared with findings from younger subjects with the same disease (n = 79) to see if aging altered the presentation and outcome of this motor disorder. Fewer elderly subjects complained of chest pain (27% vs 53%), and the pain was significantly less severe (P less than 0.01). Other presenting features (including sex, duration of symptoms, and presence and severity of dysphagia) did not differ between the groups. Across all patients, age weakly and inversely correlated with residual postdeglutitive lower esophageal sphincter; (LES) pressure (R = -0.34), and residual pressure was significantly lower in the older subjects (8.0 +/- 1.3 mm Hg vs. 11.9 +/- 0.8 mm Hg; P = 0.02). No differences in basal LES pressure or esophageal-body contraction amplitudes were present between the groups. Initial success with pneumatic dilation was similar in the two subject groups, but the number of older subjects available for analysis was too small to draw strong conclusions. These results indicate that aging decreases the elevation of LES residual pressure that occurs with achalasia. As elderly achalasia patients also present with less chest pain, the findings may be interrelated.
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PMID:Achalasia in the elderly. Effects of aging on clinical presentation and outcome. 198 68

The three main symptoms of esophageal disease or disorder are dysphagia, chest pain, and heartburn. Dysphagia in achalasia is mainly due to a non-relaxing lower esophageal sphincter (LES). The mechanism of dysphagia in diffuse esophageal spasm and related motor disorders is related to a combination of several factors including incomplete LES relaxation, failed or weak peristalsis (pressure less than 30 mmHg in the distal esophagus, and orad positive pressure gradient). Meal manometry and balloon distention may prove to be useful provocation tests. Chest pain of esophageal origin may be due to gastroesophageal reflux and esophageal motility disorders; it may also be a manifestation of an irritable esophagus, in which the esophagus is hypersensitive to various stimuli (chemical, mechanical, ischemic). Esophageal provocation tests may suggest the esophageal origin of the pain but do not give information on the nature of the esophageal disorder. Twenty-four-hour pH and pressure measurements may, however, yield this information. Heartburn and acid regurgitations are the most typical symptoms of gastroesophageal reflux. Transient relaxations of the LES are considered to be an important contributory mechanism of reflux. Absent basal LES pressure is another mechanism, which accounts for about one-fourth of the reflux episodes in patients with severe reflux esophagitis. During long-lasting inappropriate relaxations, swallows often produce deglutitive contraction waves that die out in the upper esophagus, suggesting that reflux often occurs during periods of inhibition of both LES tone and peristaltic esophageal activity.
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PMID:Recent studies of the pathophysiology and diagnosis of esophageal symptoms. 223 80

This review describes our use of the Dor operation in the management of 22 patients with achalasia of the cardia over the period 1970 to 1989. There was a male to female ratio of 1.8:1. All presented with dysphagia of varying degree, with regurgitation (86%), weight loss (73%), pain (59%) and chest infections (14%) being associated symptoms. Two patients had undergone previous balloon dilatation, with temporary benefit. The morbidity was low and follow-up results were good in 94% of cases. None of the patients had symptoms of gastro-oesophageal reflux in the postoperative period. In our experience, the Dor modification of the Heller operation has yielded gratifying results.
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PMID:Surgery for achalasia cardiae: the Dor operation. 233 94


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