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

In a series of 18 patients with angina pectoris, in whom treatment over at least 3 years with nitroderivatives and Ca-antagonists had become partially ineffective on chest pain, and in 18 patients with angina-like non-cardiac chest pain, the following examinations were carried out: upper gut x-ray and endoscopy, acid perfusion test, esophageal manometry, 24-hour esophageal pH monitoring associated with Holter recording. The presence or absence of coronary insufficiency was established by means of scintigraphic and ECG tests, Holter monitoring and coronary arteriography. In both groups the majority of patients had abnormal esophageal function, but in patients with angina pectoris treated for a long period of time the motility changes were prevalently reflux-related. With respect to the origin of chest pain, the esophagus was found to be the likely cause in 4 patients with angina pectoris, and the probable cause in another 10 of the same group; it was the likely cause in 7 patients without angina pectoris, and the probable cause in another 7 of the same group. As nitroderivatives and Ca-antagonists decrease the LES tone and the amplitude of esophageal pressure waves, long-term treatment with these drugs may be taken into account in the genesis of gastro-esophageal reflux and related changes, including esophageal pain.
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PMID:The esophagus as a possible cause of chest pain in patients with and without angina pectoris. 237 62

Chest pain is a cause of significant anxiety in a patient. Even those who have no evidence of cardiac disease may have many visits to the emergency department and even repeated hospitalizations because of chest pain. Atypical chest pain is now the commonest reason for patients to be referred for esophageal manometry studies. The development of provocative studies has led both to an increased demonstration of esophageal origin of chest pain, as well as an increased awareness of the complexity of the esophageal response to a variety of stimuli. The possibility of a generalized smooth muscle disorder has been considered on the basis of studies demonstrating that many patients with microvascular angina have esophageal motor disorders. This review examines some of the issues related to the use of provocative agents to study patients with chest pain, in addition to briefly reviewing gastroesophageal reflux disease and esophageal mucosal disorders.
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PMID:Chest pain of esophageal origin. 269 4

Angina-like chest pain in patients with coronary arteriography raises difficult diagnostic problems. The pain may be due to microvascular angina (or syndrome X). It is postulated that during the typical angina of these patients, the ST segment shifts on exercise electrocardiogram and the abnormal electrophysiologic tests on cardiac catheterisation are due to a decreased coronary flow reserve related to microvascular abnormalities. Angina-like chest pain may also be of oesophageal origin. Gastro-oesophageal reflux and oesophageal motility disorders are the two commonest oesophageal abnormalities held responsible for the pain. Recent observations suggest that sensitivity of the oesophagus to several stimuli may be another important cause of chest pain of oesophageal origin. This condition is called irritable oesophagus. Twenty-four hour pH- and pressure-recording is at present the best way to reach a specific diagnosis about the nature of the oesophageal abnormality.
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PMID:Gastro-oesophageal reflux disease, an important cause of angina-like chest pain. 269 37

Oesophageal function was assessed in 52 patients with angina pectoris whose coronary angiograms were completely normal and in 21 patients with angina pectoris who had significant coronary artery disease. During a standard oesophageal manometric study, abnormalities were found in 23 (44%) patients with normal coronary angiograms but in only 2 (10%) patients with coronary artery disease (p less than 0.01). Twenty-four (46%) patients with normal coronary angiograms were found to have gastro-oesophageal reflux disease during 24-hour oesophageal pH monitoring. Of the 52 patients with normal coronary angiograms, 19 (37%) had gastro-oesophageal reflux disease and abnormal oesophageal motility, 5 (10%) had gastro-oesophageal reflux disease alone, and 7 (13%) had oesophageal motility disorder alone. The use of provocation procedures, including intravenous edrophonium during oesophageal manometry and treadmill exercise testing during pH monitoring, enabled the oesophageal abnormality to be demonstrated simultaneously with chest pain in 25 of these 31 patients. Typical angina pectoris, coincident with abnormal oesophageal motility, was precipitated in a subgroup of patients who had been shown to have oesophageal manometric abnormalities and gastro-oesophageal reflux disease by the infusion of hydrochloric acid into the oesophagus; both the chest pain and manometric abnormality resolved following the oral administration of antacid.
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PMID:Oesophageal function in patients with angina pectoris: a comparison of patients with normal coronary angiograms and patients with coronary artery disease. 276 42

The effect of oesophageal stimulation with acid on the exertional angina threshold was examined in 12 subjects. Each walked until the angina threshold was reached on four successive occasions; during two tests the oesophagus was instilled with 0.1 mol/l hydrochloric acid and during the other two with physiological saline. Oesophageal instillation was carried out for 20 min at rest before each walk. In 10 patients the angina point was reached after walking a significantly shorter distance on the treadmill when acid was instilled than when the saline was instilled. ST-segment changes and rate-pressure product were not significantly different during the acid and saline tests. The mechanism responsible for the reduction of angina threshold is not known. However, the effect was more pronounced in the 6 patients who had experienced regular oesophageal symptoms than in those who had not. Ischaemic heart disease and gastro-oesophageal reflux are both common, and the possibility that acid reflux may aggravate angina should be borne in mind, particularly when oesophageal symptoms are present.
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PMID:Oesophageal stimulation lowers exertional angina threshold. 285 64

33 patients with angina-like chest pain of oesophageal origin were investigated. In 8 (24%) the pain proved to be related to oesophageal motor disorders unaccompanied by gastro-oesophageal reflux; in 12 (36%) acid reflux contributed to chest pain; but in the remaining 13 (40%) identical chest pain episodes were due to various mechanisms including reflux without motor disorders, motor disorders without reflux, motor disorders without reflux but with positive acid-perfusion test, and acid reflux without motility disorders but with positive edrophonium-stimulation test. These data strongly suggest that the mechanism of pain in these patients is related to irritability of the oesophagus.
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PMID:The irritable oesophagus--a frequent cause of angina-like pain. 288 70

During 24 hour oesophageal pH monitoring 52 patients who had angina pectoris and normal coronary angiograms underwent exercise testing, as far as their symptoms allowed, on a treadmill to determine whether gastro-oesophageal reflux occurred during exertion. In 11 patients the 24 hour oesophageal pH score was abnormally high; 10 of these showed exertional gastro-oesophageal reflux, and in nine this was associated with their usual chest pain. A further 13 patients had a normal 24 hour pH score but had exertional reflux coincident with chest pain during exercise testing. The mean lower oesophageal sphincter pressure in both of these groups of patients was appreciably lower than that in 28 patients who had a normal 24 hour pH score and no exertional reflux. These findings suggest that exertional gastro-oesophageal reflux accounts for the symptoms of a large proportion of patients who have angina pectoris and normal coronary angiograms and that oesophageal pH monitoring during exercise testing on a treadmill enables this group of patients to be identified.
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PMID:Exertional gastro-oesophageal reflux: a mechanism for symptoms in patients with angina pectoris and normal coronary angiograms. 311 85

The role of gastroesophageal reflux and esophageal motility abnormalities in patients with angina-type chest pain and normal coronary angiogram is not clear. The aim of this study was: a) to assess the importance of these two disorders in the same patients, b) to study the diagnostic usefulness of provocation tests, c) to determine final outcome in these patients. Seventeen patients with angina-type chest pain and normal coronary angiograms were studied to determine the diagnostic value of esophageal manometry, postprandial esophageal pH monitoring, provocation tests (methylergometrine stimulation, acid perfusion test) and endoscopy. Baseline esophageal motility was abnormal in 10 patients. Esophageal motility disorders were nonspecific in seven patients. Eight patients had reflux. The mean lower esophageal sphincter pressure was decreased in these patients as compared with normals, and endoscopy showed a high Z line, and/or a large opening of the cardia in 7 of them. Neither conventional manometry nor postprandial esophageal pH monitoring allowed to consider the esophagus as responsible for chest pain. The methylergometrine test was positive in 4 patients (simultaneous occurrence of familiar pain and esophageal dysmotility). Baseline manometric studies did not allow to forecast the response to methylergometrine injection. The acid perfusion test was negative (no symptoms were reproduced) in all patients. After esophageal evaluation, 16 patients were followed for a mean of 26 +/- 9 months. No cardiac disorders appeared, but all patients continued to have pain, and 7 were incapable of working.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[pHmetry and manometry of the esophagus in patients with pain of the angina type and a normal angiography]. 336 13

Left ventricular function and oesophageal function (including oesophageal manometry and pH monitoring) were investigated and a psychiatric assessment carried out in 63 patients with angina pectoris and normal coronary angiograms. Twenty two (35%) patients had regional abnormalities of left ventricular wall motion (group A). Thirty six (57%) patients had an oesophageal abnormality (group B); 19 patients had gastro-oesophageal reflux and abnormal oesophageal motility, five had gastro-oesophageal reflux alone, and 12 had abnormal oesophageal motility alone. Only four had regional abnormalities of the left ventricular wall and abnormal oesophageal function. In nine (14%) patients left ventricular and oesophageal function were normal (group C). Psychiatric morbidity was significantly less common in group A than in groups B and C and was similar in group B and group C. A definite abnormality of left ventricular function, oesophageal function, or psychiatric morbidity is present in a high proportion of patients with angina pectoris and normal coronary angiograms and in some instances this may lead to specific treatment. If quantitative assessment of left ventricular function is normal, oesophageal investigations should be performed. Endoscopy of the upper gastrointestinal tract may demonstrate oesophageal disease, but, if findings are normal, oesophageal manometry and ambulatory oesophageal pH monitoring (including during treadmill exercise testing) should be carried out.
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PMID:Left ventricular function and oesophageal function in patients with angina pectoris and normal coronary angiograms. 366 21

Preliminary experience with the combined use of 24 pH-metering and Holter ECG monitoring in the differential diagnosis of angina-like-pain (ALP) is reported. Twenty patients aged 24-65 (15 females and 5 males) all with angina-like-pain were studied. The aim of the study was to differentiate between oesophageal and cardiac causes of the various types of chest pain and to investigate the possibility of their coexistence. 50% of the ALP patients with a negative non-invasive cardiological report presented a pathological gastroesophageal reflux. In 5% of the cases simultaneous coronary insufficiency and pathological gastro-oesophageal reflux was noted. The importance of performing both Holter recordings and pH-metering before subjecting patients to coronarography is therefore emphasised.
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PMID:[24-hour pH measurement and Holter ECG monitoring in studying patients with angina-like chest pain. Our experience]. 371 93


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