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)

Gastroesophageal reflux is common in infants and children. In most cases it causes little more than inconvenience and remits spontaneously with time and maturation. A small and select group of refluxing children, however, will develop complications of reflux severe enough to justify operative control when medical treatment fails. Recurrent pulmonary infections, obstructive apnea, nutritional wasting, and progressive inflammatory injury to the esophagus all qualify as surgical indications, provided a reasonable cause-effect relationship with reflux can be established. The procedure of choice depends very much upon the skill and experience of the surgeon. The complete fundoplication seems to offer more complete control of reflux, but it has the potential for more frequent and more complicated side-effects.
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PMID:Current thinking on the role of surgery in gastroesophageal reflux. 389 85

Wasting is a major complication of advanced head and neck cancer and the aim of this study was to compare nasogastric tube feeding (NG) and percutaneous fluoroscopic gastrostomy (PFG) in these patients. The goal of these two methods of nutritional support was to improve or maintain the initial nutritional status during treatment. A total of 90 patients, all stage IV oropharynx or hypopharynx tumor, were reviewed from a prospective databank. All these patients were treated by concomitant chemotherapy and twice-daily continuous radiotherapy with no acceleration. Fifty patients were managed by PFG, and the rest by NG. Mechanical failure, duration of feeding, complications, nutritional evaluation and quality of life were analysed. Mechanical failure occurred in 32 of the 40 NG patients and in seven of the gastrostomy group. In the PFG group, 80% of patients conserved their nutritional support after the end of the radiotherapy, none patient in the NG group. In the PFG group, two presented a wound infection and six had aspiration pneumonia while in the NG group, 21 had aspiration pneumonia probably due to the NG tube (gastroesophageal reflux). The feeding methods were found to be equally effective at maintaining body weight and body mass index at time 1 (3 weeks) and at time 2 (6 weeks). Advantages were associated with PFG cosmesis, mobility and quality of life. PFG is a safe and effective method of providing enteral nutrition during treatment to patients with advanced head and neck cancer and offers important advantages over NG.
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PMID:Comparison between nasogastric tube feeding and percutaneous fluoroscopic gastrostomy in advanced head and neck cancer patients. 1130 12

Abnormalities of nutrition status are a common problem in children on peritoneal dialysis (PD) and a source of significant morbidity and mortality. The state of decreased body protein mass and fuel reserves (body protein and fat mass) common in PD patients is now better known as protein-energy wasting (PEW). Protein-energy wasting is a slow, progressive process in chronic kidney disease. The correct approach to this problem includes measurement of early, intermediate, and late markers of PEW, and consideration of the risk factors specific to the patient and to PD. The earliest markers of PEW are associated with some symptoms observed clinically: a decrease in dietary intake and an increase in inflammatory markers. The second stage in the development of PEW (patients with established PEW) is characterized by abnormalities in numerous markers: bioimpedance analysis (BIA) and anthropometric indices, other indices of body mass and composition, biochemical parameters, and indices of protein, glucose, and lipid metabolism. When PEW is established, clear clinical signs become evident: patients in this stage are characterized by high rates of hospitalization and an increased risk for morbidity and mortality as compared with patients without cachexia. Risk factors for PEW can already be present in an apparently well-nourished child who initiates PD: glucose absorption from PD fluid, abdominal distension from PD volume, gastroesophageal reflux, and even more importantly, inadequate dialysis dose in relation to decline in residual renal function. Given the complexity of the pathogenesis and clinical picture of PEW, no single measure, but rather panels of nutritional measures are necessary to diagnose the condition. Combined nutrition scores such as the anthropometry-BIA nutrition score may add value to the monitoring of nutrition status in children on PD.
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PMID:Assessment and monitoring of nutrition status in pediatric peritoneal dialysis patients. 1927 Feb 11