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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 incidence of sliding hiatal hernias in 44 patients operated upon for
gastroesophageal reflux
has been analysed. Preoperative X-ray and endoscopy were carried out in all patients. Esophageal manometry was made in 26 patients and preoperative pH-measurements were made in 22 patients.
Sliding hiatal hernia
was found by X-ray examination in 24 patients. The incidence of hiatal hernia was increasing with age, while the reflux disease in the non-hiatal hernia patients was equally distributed in different age groups. The low incidence of hiatal hernias, especially in young patients with reflux, implies that the indications for surgery ought to be based on the demonstration of reflux itself, and not on the radiological demonstration of hiatal hernia. The low incidence of radiologic reflux means that X-ray alone never can exclude even severe reflux disease.
...
PMID:The incidence of sliding hiatal hernias in patients with gastroesophageal reflux requiring operation. 683 25
Sliding hiatal hernia
has long term been implicated as a cause of lower esophageal sphincter (LES) incompetence and
gastroesophageal reflux
. The physics of LES function in hiatal hernia were investigated in in vitro and in vivo experiments. In vitro models of sliding hernias were constructed from excised canine gastroesophageal specimens. A "sphincter" was simulated with a rubber band around the gastroesophageal junction. It was found that placement of a ligature "hernia ring" on the stomach increased the opening pressure of the model sphincter. Addition of a tissue "hernia sac" sutured to the esophagus above the sphincter further increased the opening pressure, the protective effect being related to the pressure transmitted from the stomach to the hernia sac. There was no fluid leakage from the hernia sac between the hernia ring and the stomach. In anesthetized dogs (in vivo model) gastric and esophageal pressures were measured during gastric infusion while the LES gas way to reflux. A ligature tied loosely around the stomach to simulate a "hernia ring" and a sliding hernia without a hernia sac increased both the opening and the closing pressures of the LES by 36 +/- 18% and 35 +/- 20% (mean +/- SD), respectively. The opening pressure was increased by a decrease in gastric wall tension at the gastroesophageal junction, which was caused by the decreased radius of the herniated portion of the stomach. Pressure transmitted from the stomach to the hernia sac added to the LES pressure, and thereby further increased the opening pressure of the sphincter. The results explain how
gastroesophageal reflux
may be prevented in patients with hiatal hernia. It was recognized that the hernia sac may protect the sphincter, provided that it inserts into the esophagus above the LES.
...
PMID:Influence of hiatal hernia on lower esophageal sphincter function. 746 55
Sliding hiatal hernia
is a common endoscopic finding with a prevalence that increases with the age of patients. Although nearly all patients with
GERD
have HH, only a minority of patients with hernia reports reflux symptoms. Our hypothesis is that H. pylori infection may be responsible for the high number of asymptomatic hernias. After exclusion of patients with peptic ulcer, 507 patients with an endoscopic diagnosis of hernia were considered. Patients were divided into three groups: A, < or = 45 years, 141 patients; B, 46-60 years, 144 patients; and C, > or = 61 years, 222 patients. Presence of reflux symptoms (questionnaire) and esophagitis, H. pylori status, and gastric histology were recorded. The prevalence of hernia in the total series was 11% in group A, 23% in B, and 38% in C. Aging was associated with a significant increase in H. pylori prevalence and corpus gastritis scores, and a parallel decrease of
GERD
symptom prevalence, which was 66.6% in group A, 52.1% in B, and 46.8% in C (P < 0.01). Taking the three groups together, prevalence of H. pylori infection was higher in patients without
GERD
than with
GERD
(66.4 vs 57.3%, P < 0.05), and higher in patients with nonerosive
GERD
than erosive
GERD
(62.8 vs 48.6%, P = 0.02); corpus gastritis scores were significantly higher in patients without
GERD
than those with
GERD
and in those with nonerosive than erosive
GERD
. In conclusion, H. pylori infection protects against development of
GERD
in subjects with hiatus hernia. This effect is significantly more evident in the elderly where, in spite of the high prevalence of hernia, only a small number of individuals develop
GERD
. The development of a corpus-predominant gastritis is probably responsible for this effect.
...
PMID:Relationship of sliding hiatus hernia to gastroesophageal reflux disease: a possible role for Helicobacter pylori infection? 1274 48