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

Ninety-two patients with severe gastro-oesophageal reflux submitted to fundoplication from 1979 to 1984 have been studied. Severity of symptoms pre- and postoperatively have been assessed using a symptom score. The mean pre-operative score was 5.39 out of 9. A standard procedure for the fundoplication was used, including a long (5 cm) wrap leaving the wrap in an intrathoracic position when it could not be brought completely into the abdomen. Vagotomy was added in 53 patients. Posterior gastropexy was used in 54 patients. There was a zero incidence of damage to the spleen and a zero mortality. The mean symptom score on follow up was 0.41 out of 9 with 90.5% patients having absent or minimal symptoms. However, only 68% remained satisfied with their overall results. The incidence of sequelae related to the procedure itself including gas bloat (19.6%), dumping (7.6%) diarrhoea (6.5%) and development of gastric ulcer (2.2%) explained this discrepancy. The addition of vagotomy did not improve the results but added its complications especially dumping and diarrhoea. There were no differences in clinical results whether the fundoplication had been left in the chest or in the abdomen but there were two hazardous complications of the intrathoracic fundoplication including a perforated gastric fundus and a gastric ulcer in the thoracic part of the stomach. Posterior gastropexy conferred no benefit to the results. Measures which might improve results include: avoidance of vagotomy, intrathoracic fundoplication and gastropexy; shortening the wrap; and the use of a 50-60 F dilator in the oesophagus during the wrap.
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PMID:Fundoplication for gastro-oesophageal reflux. 387 Jan 65

Posterior partial fundoplication can be as effective as total fundoplication in the long-term control of gastroesophageal reflux if the gastric fundus valve is encircled around the distal esophagus for no less than 270 degrees to obtain effective pressures in the newly built sphincter. In order to minimize the adverse effects, to reach constant results and to guarantee the reproducibility of the technique we have modified the 270 degrees posterior fundoplicatio (formerly described by Lind) according to the following principles: 1) the length of the gastric valve must be limited to 3 cm for each side of the esophagus; 2) the gastric valve must be fixed to the right and left side of the hiatal orifice by a single stitch; 3) the gastric valve must be calibrated with an intraoperative manometry, this allowing the standardization of the valve pressure to an average value of 35 mmHg by varying its wrapping angle; 4) the hiatal orifice must not be closed unless it is large enough for thoracic migration of the gastroplasty. Since 1984 to 1991 43 patients with proven gastroesophageal reflux not controlled by medical treatment were submitted to surgery. Twelve Nissen procedures (NP) and 31 posterior calibrated fundoplications (PCF) were performed; PCF seemed to be superior to NP in terms of postoperative mobility. After two years 20 patients treated with PCF were evaluated clinically, manometrically and by 24-hour pH monitoring. No dysphagia was reported; in two patients a pH-metric, asymptomatic relapse was observed, while one patient complained mild and occasional heartburn.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Advances in the treatment of gastroesophageal reflux. Intraoperative calibration of posterior fundoplication]. 761 60

Posterior laryngeal granuloma is an infrequent pathology of multidisciplinary interest. Actually, its real prevalence is difficult to quantify because in some cases it is asymptomatic and in other instances it may either be reabsorbed or eliminated spontaneously. It is located at the vocal apophysis of the arytenoid or, less frequently, above it or on the laryngeal side of the arytenoid. The many etiologic factors (laryngeal intubation, gastro-esophageal refluxes, blunt trauma of the larynx, vocal dysfunction), sometimes concomitant and with the possible addition of enhancing circumstances (upper aerodigestive tract inflammation, naso-gastric tube, smoking and alcohol abuse), converge to a single pathogenetic mechanism: an ulceration of the mucosa and the pericondrium, sometimes complicated by an infection, which does not heal but instead produces a typical granulation tissue with capillaries oriented radially from the center of the lesion. Post intubation granulomas, extremely rare in children, are more frequent in females. It appears that there is no correlation with duration of intubation in that granulomas, can also occur after short general anesthesia. Idiopathic or contact granulomas are more frequent in the males. They are the result of vocal laryngeal hyperfunction, habitual throat clearing or cough-like throat clearing. Gastro-esophageal reflux of gastric juice, coughing or throat clearing may injure the mucosa. A blunt trauma of the larynx may cause a granuloma if the cartilage of the vocal process is exposed. Symptoms, when present, are dysphonia, tiredness during or after voicing, bolus, laryngeal unilateral pain, sensation of something in the throat which is mobile during breathing and swallowing, traces of blood in the expectoration. Therapeutic options are surgical, medical or logopedic. Surgery, although followed by frequent recurrences, is mandatory when the granuloma causes dispnea or if a pathologic essay is needed. Medical treatment aims at solving gastroesophageal reflux and/or inflammations of the district. Logopedic rehabilitation is the most successful therapy. Since January 1992 the Authors have been adopting the rehabilitation protocol planned by the French phoniatrician Brigitte Arnoux-Sindt for post-intubation granulomas, which, moreover, is utilyzed for all type of granulomas, including those arising during the early postoperative period after cordectomy. This protocol is analytically presented and discussed. In the cases of contact granulomas, and when there is concomitant vocal dysfunction, logopedic treatment is prolonged after granuloma dissapearance with some sessions aiming at restoring correct vocal behaviour. In all the ten patients rehabilitated up to now, granulomas disappeared after a mean of 16.3 sessions held twice a week. After several months of follow-up we had no recurrences. This clinical experience, while limited in number, seems to confirm the good results already reported in French Literature.
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PMID:[Logopedic rehabilitation of laryngeal granulomas]. 872 28

Extraesophageal manifestations of gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) include chronic cough, asthma and 'acid' laryngitis. The response to medical and/or surgical therapy of these conditions is highly variable and often delayed. Of patients with GERD-related symptoms, those with extraesophageal manifestations are some of the most difficult to treat. Histamine antagonists, proton pump inhibitors and antireflux surgery have all been used to treat GERD-related asthma with variable results. Asthma patients who do not respond to high-dose acid suppression may be refractory to all forms of therapy. GERD is the third most common cause of chronic cough, and therapeutic results with acid suppression and antireflux surgery are variable. Posterior laryngitis presents as chronic hoarseness and has been shown to resolve clinically and histologically with acid suppression therapy or antireflux surgery. Results are variable, and controlled trials are lacking.
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PMID:Treatment of extraesophageal manifestations of gastroesophageal reflux disease. 934 89

A review of a combined gastroenterology and laryngology clinic was conducted to determine the effectiveness of treatment and the predictive value of clinical findings and investigations. Data were collected prospectively. Investigations were performed according to clinical criteria. Patients with symptoms suspected to be due to laryngopharyngeal reflux (based on a positive oesophageal pH test and/or changes on videolaryngoscopy consistent with posterior laryngitis) were treated with omeprazole for at least two to three months. There were 87 patients; the most common symptoms were cough (38 per cent) and hoarseness (36 per cent); 77 per cent had some symptoms suggestive of gastro-oesophageal reflux. Sixty-seven patients were given omeprazole. A good response to laryngo-pharyngeal symptoms was seen in 37 patients (55 per cent). The presence of reflux symptoms was not a predictor of a good response. Increasing severity of oesophageal acid exposure over the 24 hours of pH testing was associated with a better symptom response (Spearman rank correlation, p = 0.01). Posterior laryngitis was not associated with the response to treatment, although there was a trend towards an association between improvement in laryngitis (after treatment) and improvement in symptoms (p = 0.08). The response to proton pump inhibitors was lower than other published results. Oesophageal pH monitoring may have a role in predicting which patients will respond to proton pump inhibitors. This study does not support the decision to treat with anti-secretory therapy, based only on the presence of posterior laryngitis.
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PMID:Presumed laryngo-pharyngeal reflux: investigate or treat? 1096 77

Posterior laryngeal granuloma is frequently related to 3 predisposing factors: vocal abuse, gastroesophageal reflux disease, and orotracheal intubation. It is strongly predominant in men and rare in women, except under postintubation circumstances, in which the incidence is higher in women. The aim of this study was to characterize laryngeal conformations for each sex that, whenever associated with different causes, may lead to the onset and particular location of granulomas, according to a main predisposing factor. Sixty-six subjects whose ages ranged from 18 to 73 years were studied. They were distributed into 4 groups according to the predominant cause of granuloma: intubation, vocal abuse, gastroesophageal reflux, and idiopathic causes. The larynx was evaluated during breathing, and the glottic proportion (GP) was measured. Glottic proportion is the mathematical ratio between the midsagittal dimension of the intermembranous region and that of the intercartilaginous region of the larynx during inhalation. Its measurement was feasible in 57 patients. The groups that had a causative factor other than laryngeal orotracheal intubation had GP values statistically similar to those of each other and to the control group of men, ie, close to 1.2. The postintubation group had GP values similar to the control group of women, ie, close to 1.0; this proportion protects the arytenoid region in women's larynges when there is effort during vocal production, but makes women susceptible to orotracheal postintubation granuloma.
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PMID:Importance of glottic configuration in the development of posterior laryngeal granuloma. 1151 Jul 35

The efficacy of fundoplication operations in the long-term management of gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) has been documented. However, only a few prospective controlled series support the long-term (>10 years) efficacy of these procedures, and further data are required to also determine whether the type of fundoplication affects the frequency of postfundoplication complaints. The aim of this study was to conduct a randomized, controlled clinical trial to assess the long-term symptomatic outcome of a partial posterior fundoplication as compared to a total fundic wrap. During the years 1983 to 1991, a total of 137 patients with chronic gastroesophageal reflux disease were enrolled in the study; 72 were randomized to semifundoplication (Toupet) and 65 to total fundoplication (Nissen-Rossetti). A standardized symptom questionnaire was used for follow-up of these patients. A total of 110 patients completed a median follow-up of 11.5 years; 54 had a total wrap and 56 underwent a partial posterior fundoplication. During this period, seven patients required reoperation (Nissen-Rossetti in 5 and Toupet in 2), 11 patients died, and nine patients were lost to follow-up or did not comply with the follow-up program. Control of heartburn (no symptoms or mild, intermittent symptoms) was achieved in 88% and 92% in the total and partial fundoplication groups, respectively, and the corresponding figures for control of acid regurgitation were 90% and 94%. We observed no difference in dysphagia scoring between the two groups, although odynophagia was somewhat more frequently reported in those undergoing a total fundoplication. On the other hand, a significant difference was observed in the prevalence of rectal flatus and postprandial fullness, which were recorded significantly more often in those undergoing a total fundoplication (P < 0.001 and P < 0.03, respectively). Posterior partial fundoplication seems to maintain the same high level of reflux control as total fundoplication. Earlier observations demonstrating the advantages of a partial fundoplication, which included fewer complaints associated with gas-bloat, continue to be valid after more than 10 years of follow-up.
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PMID:Long-term efficacy of total (Nissen-Rossetti) and posterior partial (Toupet) fundoplication: results of a randomized clinical trial. 1212 19

The purpose of this study was to compare the posterior dynamic imaging with the anterior imaging in the evaluation of children with gastroesophageal reflux (GER). Sixty-eight children (26 female, 42 male; age range 4 months to 7 years, median 21 months) were studied. After 4-hour fasting, all the subjects underwent gastroesophageal scintigraphy. Synchronous dynamic imaging in the anterior and posterior projections was performed with the subject in the supine position with a dual-head gamma camera equipped with low-energy general-purpose collimators at a rate of 30 s/frame for 40 min. The anterior and posterior images were visually evaluated for the presence of gastroesophageal reflux by two nuclear medicine physicians. The anterior and posterior images were correlated by Pearson correlation analysis, and inter-observer variability was evaluated by paired t-test and kappa value. There was a good correlation between the two projections with r-values of 0.906-0.990. The inter-observer agreement for interpretation of the anterior and posterior imaging was excellent (k: 0.83). In conclusion, anterior and posterior dynamic imaging showed excellent correlation in detection of GER in children. Posterior imaging is superior to anterior imaging in that it is more comfortable, and it reduces motion artifacts, especially for infants and anxious children; thus, it may be preferred over anterior imaging.
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PMID:Gastroesophageal scintigraphy in children: a comparison of posterior and anterior imaging. 1577 Sep 68

The incidence of gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) in patients with laryngopharyngeal symptoms is greater than expect. A prospective study was performed to investigate the incidence of gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) and laryngopharyngeal reflux (LPR) in patients with laryngopharyngeal symptoms. Laryngologic evaluation with nasopharyngeal and laryngeal endoscopy and gastroenterologic evaluation with esophagogastroduodenoscopy including measurement of pH value were performed in 46 patients. Therapeutic intervention included general antireflux precautions and antireflux medication, and eradication of Helicobacter pylori in selected cases. Posterior laryngitis was present in 33 patients. GERD was present in 25 patients, hiatus hernia in 4 patients, H pylori-positive gastritis in 11 patients, and Barrett's metaplasia in 2 patients. Increasing evidence shows that GERD may cause laryngopharyngeal symptoms. Otherwise laryngopharyngeal symptoms can be predictors of GERD. Medical antireflux treatment is also effective for laryngopharyngeal symptoms.
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PMID:Laryngopharyngeal symptoms and gastroesophageal reflux disease. 1593 24

Posterior laryngitis is a common cause of chronic cough, hoarseness, voice fatigue and throat pain. The aim of the present study was to examine how patients with posterior laryngitis have been examined, treated and followed up, and to assess their present health-related quality of life (HRQOL). Patients treated for posterior laryngitis at consultation at the ear-, nose- and throat clinic during 2000-2008 were contacted by mail. The letter contained questionnaires addressing the current symptoms and medication, and the HRQOL 36-item short-form questionnaire (SF-36). Medical records were scrutinized. One hundred and twenty-two patients with verified signs and symptoms of posterior laryngitis were included. Forty percent of the patients had been treated for acid-related symptoms prior to consultation. The most common symptoms at the time of consultation were the sensation of hoarseness (women 40 %, men 37 %), globus (women 35 %, men 33 %) and cough (women 33 %, men 26 %). The most frequent diagnosis was gastro-oesophageal reflux disease. Ninety percent of the women and 92 % of the men were treated with proton pump inhibitors (PPIs). At the time of study, 63 % of the patients still had symptoms. The results of the SF-36 questionnaire showed significantly lower HRQOL for women. Patients with posterior laryngitis present varying symptoms, and are often not adequately treated or followed up. When PPI treatment fails, other aetiologies of their complaints, such as visceral hypersensitivity, weakly gaseous acid reflux or non-acid reflux are not considered. Symptoms from posterior laryngitis have a negative impact on the HRQOL for women.
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PMID:Posterior laryngitis: a study of persisting symptoms and health-related quality of life. 2284 94


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