Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0017168 (gastroesophageal reflux disease)
11,783 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The aim of this study was the assessment of citric acid cough threshold in patients with chronic cough due to GERD, confirmed by 24-hour esophageal pH- monitoring, with other reasons of chronic cough excluded. Thirty subjects with chronic cough due to GERD and 15 healthy volunteers underwent cough challenge with doubling concentrations of citric acid using Asthma Provocation System (Jaeger). The cough threshold was defined as the first concentration of citric acid that induced cough. Spirometric parameters (FEV, PEF and FVC) were measured before and 10 minutes after cough challenge in all groups. A day and night cough score diaries (verbal category descriptive score) were completed in all subjects. The cough threshold was significantly lower in GERD patients in comparison with healthy volunteers. In GERD patients the negative correlation was found between day cough score measurements and cough threshold. Citric acid cough challenge did not cause bronchoconstriction or any significant change of spirometric parameters.
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PMID:[Assessment of cough threshold in patients with gastroesophageal reflux disease]. 1458 28

Gastroesophageal reflux is known to cause chronic cough and is also implicated in worsening of asthma. We conducted a prospective study to examine the clinical significance of gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) in asthmatic patients with chronic cough to analyze the temporal relationship between reflux events and coughing and to assess the effect of esomeprazole treatment on respiratory symptoms and lung function in these patients. Asthmatic patients (126) with chronic dry cough were studied. Diagnosis of GERD was based on typical symptoms and the effectiveness of therapeutic test or on pH monitoring. Patients without GERD (negative pH results) consisted of the control group. The results of pH monitoring showed that 64% of cough episodes were related to acid reflux and in 91% of reflux events preceded coughing. Esomeprazole treatment (40 mg/day for 3 months) not only diminished GERD symptoms but also improved asthma outcome Baseline FEV(1) and PEF values increased significantly together with a decrease in symptom scores and the use of rescue medication. In most patients included in the extended part of the study for another 3 months, the dose of inhaled steroids could be reduced with sustained GERD therapy. Our data showing that reflux events preceded coughing in most cases and that treatment of GERD resulted in an improvement in different outcome measures of asthma suggest that GERD worsens asthma, and its treatment is of clinical importance to effectively manage these patients.
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PMID:The influence of gastroesophageal reflux disease and its treatment on asthmatic cough. 1579 67

Chronic cough (more than 8 weeks) is a frequent symptom (30 millions consultations/ year). The most encountered causes are: asthma, gastro-oesophageal reflux, post nasal drip. Practically we propose the following approach: 1. clinical history, physical examination, chest-X ray, spirometry; 2. to exclude a post infection cough or secondary to an ACEI; 3. in case of high clinical probability of asthma, post-nasal drip, gastro-oesophageal reflux, to treat adequately. In case of negative clinical probability or unsuccessful treatment, metacholine test, oesophageal studies, PEF recording, CT thorax, bronchoscopy, CT sinuses are the most useful tests, using clinical history as guide. Using such an approach, treatment is successful in the vast majority of cases.
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PMID:[Chronic cough: a practical approach]. 1604 95

Among the possible mechanisms explaining the worsening of asthma due to gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) is the increase in bronchial hyperresponsiveness. The effects of GERD on bronchial hyperresponsiveness in patients with bronchial asthma have yet to be studied in significant detail. The aim of this study was to determine the effects of esophageal acid perfusion on bronchial responsiveness to bradykinin in patients with both asthma and GERD. In 20 patients with asthma and GERD disease, esophageal pH was monitored with a pH meter and bronchial responsiveness was evaluated by aerosol inhalation of bradykinin during esophageal acid perfusion and, 24 h earlier or later the patients were submitted to another bronchial provocation test without acid infusion. No significant changes were observed in FEV(1), FEF(25-75%), FVC, or PEF during acid perfusion. The response to the bronchial provocation test did not differ between the control day and the day of acid infusion (p = 0.61). The concentration provoking a 20% fall in FEV(1) (geometric mean +/- geometric SD) was 1.09 +/- 5.84 on the day of acid infusion and 0.98 +/- 5.52 on the control day. There is no evidence that acid infusion changes bronchial responsiveness to bradykinin. These findings strongly question the significance of acid infusion as a model to study the pathogenesis of GERD-induced asthma.
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PMID:Bronchial responsiveness during esophageal acid infusion. 1829 39