Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0017168 (gastroesophageal reflux disease)
11,783 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A new theory was tested that swallowing the wrong way is the cause of the strong correlation between bronchial symptoms and gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD). One hundred and nineteen patients who were operated on for hiatal hernia and GERD were compared with 89 patients treated with the proton pump inhibitor omeprazole concerning bronchial symptoms before and after treatment. Both groups had a frequency of cough of 34% before treatment. Omeprazole did not give any significant relief of cough, whereas patients who were operated on with fundoplication and crural repair showed a highly significant reduction of cough and bronchitis. It is believed that the distal anchoring of the longitudinal esophageal muscle by surgery improves esophageal transit and restores the delicate coordination in the swallowing centre between deglutition, the opening of the upper esophageal sphincter, and the epiglottic closure of the laryngeal entrance. It is concluded that the main reason for chronic bronchitis in patients with GERD is intermittent aspiration due to partial mis-swallowing.
...
PMID:Wrong-way swallowing as a possible cause of bronchitis in patients with gastroesophageal reflux disease. 851 46

Cough is one of the most prevalent symptoms of bronchopulmonary diseases. If cough persists ( > 6 weeks), further workup is mandatory. The most common causes of persistent cough in nonsmokers presenting with a normal CXR are postnasal drip due to chronic rhinitis-sinusitis, cough equivalent asthma or gastroesophageal reflux. The response to empirical therapy may confirm one of these etiologies. Other causes of chronic cough need further extensive workup involving radiologic, functional and endoscopic procedures.
...
PMID:[Cough--work-up and therapy]. 852 38

Respiratory complications of gastroesophageal reflux disease that have been reported include hoarseness, wheezing, bronchospasm, stridor, laryngitis, and chronic cough. Syncope as a manifestation of gastroesophageal reflux disease-induced cough has not been described in the literature. We present an unusual case of gastroesophageal reflux that resulted in frequent cough-induced syncope. Treatment ultimately consisted of a laparoscopic Nissen fundoplication which resulted in sustained relief from both cough and syncope.
...
PMID:Gastroesophageal reflux-induced cough syncope. 854 May 17

Gastro-oesophageal reflux (GOR) has been implicated in such clinical phenomena as aspiration pneumonia, bronchospasm or wheezing, apnea, stridor, and hoarseness. Various tests have been used as an aid to diagnosing patients with chronic respiratory disease where GOR is a causal factor. Different forms of conservative treatment have been tried for GOR, including cisapride. Several studies have evaluated its effect on the pH profile and respiratory symptoms in patients with chronic respiratory disease and have demonstrated improvement of nocturnal wheezing, cough, and irritability. Our experience with cisapride is positive in children with GOR. Patients refractory to medical treatment have been surgically treated with good results.
...
PMID:Gastro-oesophageal reflux and chronic respiratory disease in infants and children: treatment with cisapride. 854 28

A meta-analysis was performed on randomised prospective trials comparing the laryngeal mask airway (LMA) with other forms of airway management to determine if the LMA offered any advantages over the tracheal tube (TT) or facemask (FM). Of the 858 LMA publications identified to December 1994, 52 met the criteria for the analysis. Thirty-two different issues were tested using Fisher's method for combining the P values. The LMA has 13 advantages over the TT and four over the FM. The LMA had two disadvantages over the TT and one over the FM. There were 12 issues where neither device had an advantage. Advantages over the TT included: increased speed and ease of placement by inexperienced personnel; increased speed of placement by anaesthetists; improved haemodynamic stability at induction and during emergence; minimal increase in intraocular pressure following insertion; reduced anaesthetic requirements for airway tolerance; lower frequency of coughing during emergence; improved oxygen saturation during emergence; and lower incidence of sore throat in adults. Advantages over the FM included: easier placement by inexperienced personnel; improved oxygen saturation; less hand fatigue; and improved operating conditions during minor paediatric otological surgery. Disadvantages over the TT were lower seal pressures and a higher frequency of gastric insufflation. The only disadvantage compared with the FM was that oesophageal reflux was more likely. The importance of these findings in terms of patient outcome could not be determined from the published data.
...
PMID:The advantages of the LMA over the tracheal tube or facemask: a meta-analysis. 859 Apr 90

The approach to patients with chronic cough has been well defined and evaluated in the literature through a number of prospective studies. Meticulous attention to detail of the afferent loop of the cough reflex has helped identify the cause of cough in most patients. The most common causes appear to be similar in both children and adults and include asthma, postnasal drip syndromes, gastroesophageal reflux diseases, and aspiration. In children, recurrent viral infections and infections with atypical organisms also are very prevalent. Specific therapy directed at the cause alleviates the cough in most patients. In some patients, there may be more than one cause of cough. Invasive testing (eg, bronchoscopy and esophageal pH probing) is rarely necessary. In patients in whom a specific cause cannot be identified or in whom cough modifiers are necessary while specific therapy is taking hold, antitussives of both the narcotic and nonnarcotic variety are helpful.
...
PMID:Chronic persistent cough: diagnosis and treatment update. 864 27

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.
...
PMID:[Logopedic rehabilitation of laryngeal granulomas]. 872 28

Gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) is recognized to be present in 10-20% of cases of chronic cough. Proving that it is the cause of the cough is more difficult. This problem is illustrated by way of a case report demonstrating that GERD can still be the cause, even when the patient is unresponsive to conventional use of proton pump inhibitors. In the commentary following the case history, we review the medical literature to confirm that GERD and cough may each precipitate the other. The role of esophageal pH monitoring in difficult cases of chronic cough is explored; we emphasize the use of pH monitoring while the patient is on therapy to prove or disprove the link.
...
PMID:Excluding gastroesophageal reflux disease as the cause of chronic cough. 872 50

The objective has been to identify the different etiologies and elaborate a diagnostic and therapeutical methodology for patients with chronic cough. During one year we studied prospectively 83 patients with persistent cough of daily appearance with an evolution of four or more weeks and no previous etiologic diagnosis. We worked on three diagnostic (D) levels. D1: Based on the anamnesis and physical examination. D2: Sequential incorporation of complementary exams. D3: Evaluation of the response to the specific treatment. We divided the population into 2 groups: G1 healthy children, G2 children followed in our hospital for different conditions. The mean age was 4.7 years (range, 3 months to 15 years), and the average duration of cough was 4.9 months (range, 1 to 36 months). In G1 the following causes were identified in 78 children: cough variant asthma 41 (52%), asthma+upper respiratory tract infections 8 (10%), asthma+lower respiratory tract infections 6 (7%), postnasal drip syndrome (sinusitis, adenoiditis) 5 (6%), psychogenic 6 (7%), undetermined 4 (5%), gastroesophageal reflux 2, asthma+cigarette 2, AIDS 1, Sjogren syndrome 1, vascular ring 1, cricopharyngeal foreign body 1. In G2 out of 5 children we have found: 2 children with chronic encephalopathies who had swallowing disorders and gastroesophageal reflux, 1 patient with Down syndrome presenting hypogammaglobulinemia and bronchiectasis, 1 tracheaesophageal fistula in H in a child with recurrent pneumonia, 1 lymphocytic pneumonia in an AIDS patient. The D1 was correct in 92% of the cases. The specific therapy has proved useful for achieving the remission of the symptoms. Although asthma is the most frequent cause of chronic cough, other etiologies exist and must be ruled out.
...
PMID:[Chronic cough in pediatrics]. 872 72

Refractory cough in a patient with a normal chest X-ray usually falls into one of five categories: drug-induced (especially by ACE inhibitors), secondary to postnasal discharge, gastroesophageal reflux, or hyperactive airway disease, and idiopathic but responsive to nebulized lidocaine. The history may point to the most likely cause, and empiric therapy may confirm the diagnosis.
...
PMID:Persistent cough: causes and cures. 907 71


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>