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

Prescribing patterns of 13 residents in a medical outpatient clinic were evaluated between March and June 1986. Prescribed drugs influencing the gastrointestinal tract were also analyzed in order to define quality of the therapeutic process. Advertising for these special drugs in 3 Swiss medical journals was analyzed and compared with the prescribing behavior of participating physicians. 6300 patients with 3346 prescriptions (0.5 prescription/patient) were enrolled in the study. 16.5% of all prescriptions involved cardiovascular, 13.5% gastrointestinal, 9.5% non steroidal antirheumatic, 9.1% analgesic, 7.7% psychotropic and 7.4% antibiotic drugs. The share of 14 other classes of drugs was less than 4%. 471 prescriptions of gastrointestinal acting drugs were distributed over 288 patients (0.6 prescription/patient). 160 patients had irritable bowel syndrome, 40 ulcer disease, 23 inflammatory/infectious bowel disease, 18 gastroesophageal reflux, 18 anal diseases, 11 other gastrointestinal disorders and 15 were treated without diagnosis. Distribution of drugs was as follows: 27.5% bulk laxatives, 26% antacids, 15.7% H2-receptor antagonists, 13.5% anticholinergic agents, 4.9% laxatives, 3.4% loperamide, 9% other drugs. There was an increase in prescriptions per visit from 0.8 in 1980 to 1.5 in 1986. No important influence of drug advertising in 3 different medical journals published between January and June 1986 could be found. Considering the documented diagnoses, the therapeutic decisions were correct in 95.5% of cases treated. In conclusion, drug prescribing habits are permissive, the therapeutic approach is acceptable and the influence of drug advertising is negligible.
...
PMID:[The evaluation of prescribing practice in a general internal medicine outpatient clinic with special reference to gastrointestinal medicines]. 227 Apr 51

The aim of this study was to assess the incidence of oesophageal abnormalities and to determine their nature in patients with retrosternal chest pain and normal coronary angiography with a negative coronary spasm provocation test. Oesophageal manometry was carried out in all cases with or without a spasm provocation (usually alkalosis) test. Forty consecutive patients were studied: 19 men (47.7 +/- 10.0 years) and 21 women (54.7 +/- 7.5 years). A history of gastro-intestinal disorder was obtained in 57 p. 100 of cases (hiatal hernia and/or gastro-oesophageal reflux, biliary lithiasis and/or cholecystectomy, gastritis). Seventeen patients had broad based powerful oesophageal contractions which are an established cause of pain; they were recorded under basal conditions in 5 cases and after a provocation test in 12 cases. Two patients had a megaoesophagus without giant waves. Thirteen patients had manometric signs of reflux (malposition and hypotonia of the lower oesophageal sphincter) of whom 7 had giant waves on provocation. In addition, three patients experienced pain during gastro-oesophageal reflux (1 case) or hypotonia of the lower oesophageal sphincter (2 cases). In all, a very probable oesophageal origin of the chest pain was demonstrated in 22 patients (55 p. 100 of cases).
...
PMID:[Esophageal motility in cases of chest pain with normal coronarography]. 343 26

Evidence for cow's milk allergy was looked for prospectively in 15 children with recurrent vomiting. Whereas radiological examination showed gastro-oesophageal reflux to be present in all patients, 3 out of 15 children presented an enteropathy associated with an increased number of IgE plasmocytes in small intestinal biopsy tissue. These three patients did not improve with conventional medical therapy but a striking improvement occurred within 24 h on a cow's milk-free diet. We conclude that diagnostic confusion between gastro-oesophageal reflux and cow's milk allergy can occur and that the presence of IgE plasmocytes in small intestinal biopsy tissue indicates IgE-mediated cow's milk protein allergy. All cases of "intractable" gastro-oesophageal reflux should be suspected of cow's milk allergy and investigated accordingly.
...
PMID:Cow's milk protein allergy and gastro-oesophageal reflux. 407 44

During a 2 year period, 83 patients with gastric motility problems were evaluated using radionuclide imaging. The patients presented with epigastric distress, postprandial fullness, pain, nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea; signs and symptoms suggestive of either gastroparesis or gastric outlet obstruction. Upper gastrointestinal series or endoscopy, or both, demonstrated no mechanical obstruction. After oral administration of a 300 g meal labeled with 600 muCi of technetium-99m sulfur colloid, a gastric emptying study consisting of serial images and data acquisition was performed. Of the patients studied, 52 had had peptic ulcer surgery, 17 were suspected of having gastroesophageal reflux, 8 were diabetic and suspected of having visceral enteropathy, and 6 had a history of irritable bowel syndrome. The normal mean gastric half emptying time was 77 +/- 16 minutes. Of the patients who had had gastric surgery, 90.4 percent had abnormal emptying: 69.2 percent had delayed gastric emptying and 21.2 percent had rapid gastric emptying time; 9.6 percent had normal emptying time. Of the gastroesophageal reflux group, all but two had normal gastric emptying time; 65 percent demonstrated gastroesophageal reflux within 15 minutes. Two of the patients with irritable bowel syndrome had prolonged emptying; the rest had normal emptying. All diabetic patients with gastroparesis had prolonged gastric emptying time, and all responded favorably to metoclopramide. Of the patients who previously had peptic ulcer surgery and had prolonged emptying time, 72 percent also responded favorably to metoclopramide. We conclude that radionuclide gastric imaging is a useful diagnostic test for the measurement of gastric emptying in patients with a variety of gastrointestinal motility disorders and may be helpful in assessing medical therapy and selecting those who may be candidates for surgery.
...
PMID:Assessment of gastric motility using meal labeled with technetium-99m sulfur colloid. 665 Jul 70

Patients with gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) have a coexisting diagnosis of functional bowel disease (FBD) in approximately 30% of cases. Symptom improvement after surgical therapy for GERD may be less in patients with FBD when compared to patients without this coexisting problem. A retrospective review of patients undergoing Nissen fundoplication between 1996 and 2000 evaluated patients with documented FBD or FBD symptoms to determine operative outcome. Poor postoperative outcome included recurrent heartburn, gas bloat syndrome, dysphagia requiring reoperation or dilation, or delay in resumption of normal diet. Bivariate comparison and multivariate logistic regression evaluated the independent impact of a documented diagnosis of FBD or preoperative symptoms of FBD on outcome. This study examined 155 patients: 32% reported having symptoms of FBD and 10% had a confirmed diagnosis of FBD. Poor postoperative outcomes occurred in 27%. Patients with a documented diagnosis of FBD were significantly more likely to have a poor outcome when compared to patients without symptoms of FBD (53% vs. 23%, P = 0.01). Patients with preoperative symptoms of FBD (but without a documented diagnosis of FBD) also had a higher incidence of poor outcome (5% vs. 23%, P = 0.09). Patients with FBD are at increased risk of poor results after antireflux surgery. Patients with these conditions should be counseled preoperatively regarding the potential for recurrent postoperative symptoms.
...
PMID:Influence of functional bowel disease on outcome of surgical antireflux procedures. 1212 33

Gastrointestinal food allergies are a spectrum of disorders that result from adverse immune responses to dietary antigens. The named disorders include immediate gastrointestinal hypersensitivity (anaphylaxis), oral allergy syndrome, allergic eosinophilic esophagitis, gastritis, and gastroenterocolitis; dietary protein enterocolitis, proctitis, and enteropathy; and celiac disease. Additional disorders sometimes attributed to food allergy include colic, gastroesophageal reflux, and constipation. The pediatrician faces several challenges in dealing with these disorders because diagnosis requires differentiating allergic disorders from many other causes of similar symptoms, and therapy requires identification of causal foods, application of therapeutic diets and/or medications, and monitoring for resolution of these disorders. This review catalogs the spectrum of gastrointestinal food allergies that affect children and provides a framework for a rational approach to diagnosis and management.
...
PMID:Clinical aspects of gastrointestinal food allergy in childhood. 1277

Food allergy may affect the gastrointestinal tract of children and adults too, albeit less commonly. The changing clinico-pathological expression of such food allergy in children over a 30 year period is related, from the eye witness perspective of a paediatric gastroenterologist in London. Tissue diagnosis by biopsy, related to dietary elimination and challenge has been the basis for the first clinico-pathological descriptions and accurate clinical diagnosis of these syndromes as they affect the gastrointestinal tract. In the 1970s cow's milk sensitive enteropathy presenting as chronic diarrhoea and failure to thrive in infancy often after infective gastroenteritis, especially with enteropathogenic Escherichia coli, was an important problem. By the late 1990s such presentations had become most uncommon in developed communities but they continue to occur in developing communities. By contrast in more recent times, multiple food allergy associated with minor small intestinal enteropathy and gastro-oesophageal reflux in older children has become an important clinical problem in children seen in developed communities. Accompanying these changes has been a dramatic fall in the number of children with clinically severe gastroenteritis with severe dehydration requiring hospital admission. Furthermore, the widespread diagnostic use of endoscopy of the upper and lower gastrointestinal tract in children with multiple biopsies has expanded gastroenterological diagnosis in children. This approach gives information about the oesophagus and ileo-colon not available in the earlier studies, which largely concentrated upon small intestinal biopsies, obtained by Crosby capsule biopsy. So, over this 30 year period clinico-pathological expression has altered but also the diagnostic approach has technically changed.
...
PMID:An eye witness perspective of the changing patterns of food allergy. 1629 83

The functional gastrointestinal disorders are defined by the Rome criteria as a heterogeneous group of symptom-based conditions that have no structural or biochemical explanation. However, this definition now seems outdated, because structural and molecular abnormalities have begun to be recognized in subsets of patients with the irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), the prototypic functional bowel disease. A complex classification system based arbitrarily on symptom criteria does not fit in with a number of emerging facts. For example, the symptom overlap of IBS with gastroesophageal reflux disease is not due to chance, and the emergence of post-infectious IBS, dyspepsia, or both after Salmonella gastroenteritis fits better with a 1-disease model. A new paradigm seems to be needed. All of these disorders may arise after infection or gut inflammation, but the phenotype depends on localized neuromuscular dysfunction in the predisposed human host (the "irritable gut").
...
PMID:A unifying hypothesis for the functional gastrointestinal disorders: really multiple diseases or one irritable gut? 1669 76

Systemic sclerosis is a chronic disorder of connective tissue that affects the gastrointestinal tract in more than 80% of patients. Changes in neuromuscular function with progressive fibrosis of smooth muscle within the muscularis propria impair normal motor function, which may secondarily alter transit and nutrient absorption. Esophageal manifestations with gastroesophageal reflux and dysphagia are the most common visceral manifestation of the disease, often requiring more intense acid-suppressive medication. Gastric involvement may lead to gastroparesis, which can be found in up to 50% of patients. Severe small bowel disease can present as chronic intestinal pseudo-obstruction with distended loops of small intestine, bacterial overgrowth, impaired absorption and progressive development of nutritional deficiencies. While not studied as extensively, systemic sclerosis often also affects colorectal function resulting in constipation, diarrhea or fecal incontinence. Nutritional support and prokinetics have been used with some success to manage gastric and small or large bowel involvement in patients with systemic sclerosis. Despite advances in management, significant gastrointestinal manifestations of systemic sclerosis still carry a poor prognosis with a five-year mortality exceeding 50%.
...
PMID:Gastrointestinal manifestations of systemic sclerosis. 1793 61

The term "Western diseases" refers to those conditions that are rare or absent in underdeveloped areas of the Third World and increase in frequency with adoptions of Western customs. In adults, they include such common conditions as coronary artery disease, essential hypertension, appendicitis, cholesterol gall stones, and colon cancer. The best examples of Western diseases in the pediatric population are asthma, allergies, appendicitis, and inflammatory bowel disease. Limited data from sub-Saharan Africa suggest other pediatric surgical conditions may fall into this category, including hypertrophic pyloric stenosis, gastroesophageal reflux, perirectal abscess, anal fissure, gastroschesis, and neuroblastoma. Existing theories for the origins of Western diseases have postulated a role for decreased dietary fiber, improved hygiene, fetal programming, and a protective effect of tropical enteropathy. How these factors might relate to the rise of appendicitis, inflammatory bowel disease, and possibly other common pediatric surgical diseases in industrialized societies remains poorly understood. Further research is needed to better define geographical differences in common pediatric surgical conditions and to investigate how genetic and environmental factors interact to modify risk of disease. Understanding the molecular mechanisms that give rise to Western diseases could lead to new therapeutic and prevention strategies for some of the most common pediatric surgical conditions in industrialized countries.
...
PMID:Western diseases: current concepts and implications for pediatric surgery research and practice. 1808 4


1 2 3 Next >>