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Query: UMLS:C0017168 (gastroesophageal reflux disease)
11,783 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Given the poor prognosis in carcinoma of the oesophagus, and with the aid of advances in anaesthesia and postoperative care, surgery has progressively evolved towards wider excision and a reduction in the number of operative stages. Partial oesophagectomy, with gastrolysis and gastro-oesophageal anastomosis, via a left thoracotomy, is favoured by large number of authors. However, it involves a certain number of disadvantages: by definition a limited excision, unsuitable for carcinomas in the cervical region and a marked risk of postoperative gastro-oesophageal reflux. Total oesophagectomy offers a hope of better results from an oncological standpoint, the more so since excision may be extended superiorly (laryngectomy) or inferiorly (total gastrectomy with lymph node excision). Continuity is re-established using a colonic transplant. The operation may be performed in two stages, though a single stage procedure with two teams would appear to be preferable, overall mortality and morbidity being reduced. Finally, colonic oesophagoplasty may be used alone, as a simply palliative measure, without associated tumour excision. By short-circuiting the oesophageal stenosis, it permits continued alimentation per os and the patient's period of survival is more comfortable.
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PMID:[Surgery for carcinoma of the esophagus. Methods and techniques]. 2 83

Gastroesophageal reflux is the main complaint after intrathoracic gastroplasty for carcinoma of the esophagus. Eighteen patients who underwent intrathoracic gastroplasty were studied by 24 hour pH monitoring. Two groups of patients were separately evaluated according to the surgical procedure performed--group 1, nine patients with tubulized stomach and gastroesophageal anastomosis at the apex of the thorax, and group 2, nine patients without tubulized stomach and with low gastroesophageal anastomosis. Gastroesophageal reflux and gastric function were analyzed. Gastroesophageal reflux was clinically present in 36 per cent of patients. During the 24 hour pH monitoring period, the percentage of time that the esophageal electrode showed a pH value of less than 4 was shorter for group 1 than for group 2 (13.3 +/- 11.3 versus 32.7 +/- 21.7), indicating less gastroesophageal reflux. Gastric secretion was also studied with 24 hour pH monitoring. Gastric secretion was reduced after gastroplasty, compared with a control group. Gastric secretion was identical between groups 1 and 2. Tubulization did not impair gastric secretion. Findings from this study show that good functional results can be achieved after intrathoracic gastroplasty if the anastomosis is performed on the neck or at the apex of the thorax. This technique can reduce gastroesophageal reflux without an antireflux procedure.
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PMID:pH monitoring for 24 hours of gastroesophageal reflux and gastric function after intrathoracic gastroplasty after esophagectomy. 238 85

Fifty-eight patients had surgery for carcinoma of the esophagus at Scripps Clinic, La Jolla, Calif, from 1976 to 1986. Esophagectomy with reconstruction by colon interposition was done in 24 patients with adenocarcinoma arising in columnar-lined epithelium (Barrett's). In 5 patients, obstructive symptoms had not yet developed and the diagnosis was made by endoscopy performed for evaluation of gastroesophageal reflux. Dysphagia had just started in 12 additional patients and no weight loss had been noted. The operation was palliative in 14 patients and potentially curative in the other 10. Only 3 patients had negative lymph nodes. Ten patients were alive after 2 to 11 years. Encouraging results were indicated for surgical treatment of adenocarcinoma of the esophagus developing in Barrett's epithelium. A good outcome can be obtained with resection even in patients with lymph node metastases.
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PMID:Early diagnosis of adenocarcinoma developing in Barrett's esophagus. 247 86

Adenocarcinoma of the esophagus is a well-known complication of Barrett esophagus, especially in white men. We present three cases of squamous carcinoma of the esophagus in Barrett patients. All three patients were white men. None had a history of symptomatic gastroesophageal reflux or of Barrett esophagus, but all had substantial usage of alcoholic beverages and tobacco. All three tumors were located in squamous-lined mucosa above the Barrett mucosa. Columnar epithelial dysplasia was present in the Barrett mucosa of two of our patients, and the third patient had a squamous carcinoma of the pharynx. Squamous carcinoma represented 2% of Barrett-associated esophageal carcinomas at our institution in 1980 through 1986. Five additional cases were found in the literature, and all were also in white men. This demographic predominance stood in striking contrast to the 26% prevalence of white patients among those with squamous carcinoma of the esophagus at our institution (P less than 0.0002) and to the 50% prevalence of white men among our patients with Barrett esophagus (P less than 0.02). Two of the literature cases also had substantial alcohol and tobacco usage and had synchronous adenocarcinoma arising in Barrett mucosa. Our findings of a strikingly high prevalence of white men and of multifocal neoplastic changes in the upper aerodigestive tract suggest a pathogenetic relationship between squamous carcinoma of the esophagus and Barrett esophagus, possibly due to alcoholic beverage and tobacco usage. Endoscopic surveillance of Barrett patients for early detection of adenocarcinoma has been recommended; contemporaneous evaluation of the squamous-lined esophagus by biopsy and cytopathology may be advisable.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Squamous carcinoma of the esophagus in patients with Barrett esophagus. 292 88

One hundred adult patients underwent Ivor Lewis esophagogastrectomy for documented carcinoma of the esophagus from 1980 through 1982. After operation, 7 patients were classified in Stage I, 11 in Stage II, and 82 in Stage III. Major postoperative complications occurred in 27 patients and included pulmonary problems in 11, suture line leak in 9, wound infection in 5, empyema in 4, renal failure in 4, abdominal abscess in 4, bleeding in 2, myocardial infarction in 2, and chylothorax in 1. There were 3 deaths within 30 days of operation. Five-year survival was 85.7% for patients with Stage I disease, 34.1% for patients with Stage II disease (p = .052), and 15.2% for patients with Stage III disease (p = .001). Late morbidity included weight loss in 60 patients, dysphagia in 40, gastroesophageal reflux in 14, and gastroduodenal dumping in 5. Thirty-one patients required postoperative esophageal dilations (mean, 3.4). Most patients, however, were eating without dysphagia at the time of last follow-up or death. We conclude that the Ivor Lewis esophagogastrectomy can be performed with low mortality, can provide adequate palliation, and does result in satisfactory long-term survival for those patients with more favorable postsurgical stages of cancer. These results support the continued use of the Ivor Lewis esophagogastrectomy for treatment of carcinoma of the esophagus.
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PMID:Ivor Lewis esophagogastrectomy for carcinoma of the esophagus: early and late functional results. 361 35

Forty-six patients with esophageal achalasia required reoperation between January 1970 and January 1986. Three of these patients required a second reoperative procedure, for a total of 49 reoperations. Indications for reoperation were inadequate myotomy, 17; gastroesophageal reflux, 14; concomitant antireflux operation, six; incorrect diagnosis, four; carcinoma of the esophagus, four; megaesophagus, three; and paraesophageal hernia, one. Various procedures were employed at the time of reoperation, including revision of the myotomy, takedown or revision of a previously performed wrap, fundoplication, and resection. Of the 48 patients available for follow-up study over an average postoperative period of 5 years, the condition of 38 (79%) was considered to have been improved by reoperation. The best results were obtained by revision or takedown of a previous wrap (an improvement rate of 88.9%) and radical resective procedures (89% to 100%). We conclude that for good results to be achieved after reoperative achalasia procedures, the preoperative diagnosis must be accurate, the operation should be performed early before the development of megaesophagus, and a short but complete esophagomyotomy must be performed, preferably without the addition of an antireflux procedure. Elimination or revision of a previously performed fundoplication can be expected to be followed by good results. The precise indications for radical resective procedures have yet to be defined clearly, but their wider application to carefully selected patients with postoperative achalasia seems justified.
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PMID:Reoperative achalasia surgery. 377 41

Alcohol leads to acute and chronic defects at the alimentary tract. Immediate and indirect effects are often not to be deliminated easily in the individual case. In the oesophagus above all disturbances of motility, reduction of the tonus, gastroesophageal reflux, oesophagotitides, Barrett's syndrome and carcinoma of the oesophagus develop. The Mallory-Weiss- and the Boerhaavesyndrome are to be regarded more as indirect associated sequelae. As to the stomach haemorrhagic gastrotitides and haemorrhages from erosions of the mucous membrane, as to the intestine changes of the motility, diarrhoea and malabsorptions.
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PMID:[Alcohol and the digestive tract]. 702 51

A new operation was designed to supplement the Kirschner operation for patients with locally advanced carcinoma of the esophagus and who, in addition, had had a gastrectomy for peptic ulcer disease. Bypass of the esophageal obstruction was by jejunal loop, and gastroesophageal reflux was prevented by fundoplication. Eighteen patients underwent this operation with a mortality of 27.8 per cent. Death occurred in one of the three patients with leakage of the esophagojejunal anastomosis. One patient had gangrene of the jejunal loop develop. Severe bronchopneumonia was the cause of death in all five. The functional result in the surviving patients was satisfactory and they lived for a mean period of 3.6 months postoperatively. It is not advocated that this operation replace the Kirschner operation, which we consider the operation of choice for locally advanced carcinoma of the esophagus, but as an alternative procedure in those patients in whom a previous gastric resection precluded a Kirschner operation.
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PMID:Jejunal loop bypass and fundoplication for malignant esophagobronchial fistula. 705 73

In the last 12 months 40 patients underwent surgery for carcinoma of the esophagus. In 18 cases the tumor was located in the lower third of the esophagus. An abdomino-thoracic approach was employed and a 2/3 resection of the esophagus and an esophagogastrostomy were performed. The resected area was bridged by an isoperistaltic gastric tissue tube and anastomosis was carried out using the EEA stapler. A telescope antirefluxplasty was performed to protect the anastomosis and to prevent a gastroesophageal reflux. One patient died of pneumonia. In all cases a secure anastomosis was achieved and in most cases gastroesophageal reflux was prevented.
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PMID:[Surgery of esophageal cancer]. 747 41

Esophageal carcinoma is one of the most common malignant diseases in China. In order to clarify the pathophysiology of the esophageal motor dysfunction in the disease, a comparative study was done with esophageal manometry and 24 hour pH monitoring in 90 patients with esophageal carcinoma (EC) including 17 cardiac carcinoma (CC) and 56 healthy adult volunteers. The results showed that the resting pressure of the esophagus in patients was lower, particularly during swallowing and Valsalva test, than that of the normal subjects. It indicated that the patients with EC and CC had a hypodynamic esophagus so that a series of abnormal esophageal peristalsis and contractive waves were found. Besides the effect of mechanical obstruction of the tumor itself, it was believed to be a causative factor, at least in part, for the production of the clinical symptoms such as dysphagia and spastic odynophagia occurred during swallowing. Being the lower LESP, the patients with EC and CC presented pathological gastroesophageal reflux which was proved by 24 hour pH monitoring findings.
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PMID:[Motor function of the esophagus in patients with esophageal or gastric cancer]. 822 25


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