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)

Fifty patients with non-cardiac chest pain underwent 24 hour intraoesophageal pH and pressure recording and provocation tests to determine the relative value of both techniques in establishing the oesophageal origin of the chest pain. Twenty six patients (52%) had at least one positive provocation test: the acid perfusion test was positive related in 18 patients (36%), the edrophonium test in 16 patients (32%), the vasopressin test in five patients (10%), and the balloon distension test (performed in only 20 patients) in one (5%). The 24 hour pH and pressure recording correlated spontaneous chest pain attacks with abnormal motility or gastro-oesophageal reflux in 19 patients (38%). Fourteen of these patients also had at least one positive provocation test. Therefore, 24 hour pH and pressure recordings are only slightly better than a set of provocation tests in identifying the oesophagus as the cause of chest pain (10% diagnostic gain). In the case of oesophageal chest pain, however, 24 hour recording appeared to be the only way to identify the nature of the underlying oesophageal abnormality that caused the spontaneous pain attacks--for example, gastro-oesophageal reflux, motility disorders, or irritability of the oesophagus.
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PMID:Ambulatory 24 hour intraoesophageal pH and pressure recordings v provocation tests in the diagnosis of chest pain of oesophageal origin. 237 9

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

In order to determine whether the presence of a retrosternal pain sensitive to nitroglycerin is predictive of the finding of esophageal dyskinesia in patients with normal coronary angiography and negative methylergonovine test, we administered 0.8 mg of a nitroglycerin spray during esophageal manometry and after a methylergonovine or edrophonium provocation test. The effects of nitroglycerin on esophageal motility were recorded and compared with clinical data. Forty patients (21 men, 19 women, mean age 54 +/- 8 years) entered the study. In 22 of them (55 p. 100) the retrosternal pain was relieved by nitroglycerin within less than 5 minutes; the provocation test was positive in 10 cases (25 p. 100). In all patients nitroglycerin produced a highly significant decrease in the duration and amplitude of esophageal contractions. Among the 10 patients with esophageal dyskinesia, the duration of contractions was significantly more reduced (p less than 0.005) in those with nitroglycerin-sensitive pain (6 patients) than in those with nitroglycerin-resistant pain. These 6 patients, therefore, could be regarded clinically and manometrically as "responders" to nitroglycerin. Two of them had gastro-esophageal reflux. In contrast, among patients without induced esophageal dyskinesia the effects of nitroglycerin on manometry were the same irrespective of whether or not pain was usually relieved by nitroglycerin. The fact that pain was nitroglycerin-sensitive had no predictive value concerning the finding of esophageal dyskinesia by the provocation test (non-significant X2 test). We conclude that the clinical and manometric effects of nitroglycerin were concordant only in patients with induced esophageal dyskinesia; patients who responded to nitroglycerin could have a gastro-esophageal reflux.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Nitroglycerin and angina with angiographically normal coronary vessels. Clinical effects and effects on esophageal motility]. 249 72

Gastric motor dysfunction and concomitant gastric stasis have been implicated in the pathogenesis of nonulcer dyspepsia, but a cause-and-effect relationship is not established. Essential dyspepsia refers to a subgroup of nonulcer dyspepsia patients who have no evidence of irritable bowel syndrome, gastroesophageal reflux, or pancreaticobiliary disease. In 32 patients with essential dyspepsia, and 32 randomly selected dyspepsia-free community controls of similar age and sex, we measured gastric emptying of solids using Tc99m-Sulphur Colloid in a fried egg sandwich. Subjects with neuromuscular or other diseases that may alter gastric emptying were excluded. Symptoms were assessed by a standard questionnaire. Data processing was carried out "blinded" to the subjects' clinical status. Female patients took significantly longer to empty half the initial stomach activity (mean 90 min) than female controls (mean, 73 min; p = 0.02). The rate of emptying at 25 min was also significantly less in female patients than in controls. Female and male controls, and male patients, had similar emptying times. Delayed emptying was not associated with the occurrence of postprandial pain, belching, or nausea; there was a trend for the half-time rate of emptying to be greater in patients with abdominal distention. While gastric emptying of solids is slightly delayed in females with essential dyspepsia as a group, this may not explain their symptoms.
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PMID:Lack of association between gastric emptying of solids and symptoms in nonulcer dyspepsia. 258 62

Five patients, aged 9-16, living in a community-based home for the mentally retarded, have undergone Nissen fundoplication for gastroesophageal reflux. They were all severely physically handicapped by cerebral palsy. Their symptoms had persisted from 1-10 years, and included chronic retching and vomiting, intermittent obstruction of the upper airways, frequent bronchial and pulmonary infections, and episodic abdominal pain and failure to thrive. Three had hematemesis. Two patients lost a great deal of weight. One had chronic reflux associated with lower airway obstruction, which improved postoperatively. All patients had undergone conservative medical treatment of four to 12 months duration, with no lasting improvement. There were very few postoperative complications. One patient had to be reoperated. After surgical treatment their main symptoms had disappeared and their subsequent management was easier. We have reasons to believe that this condition is seriously underdiagnosed in our society, thereby causing unnecessary pain and distress in patients who are unable to convey their complaints to others.
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PMID:[Gastroesophageal reflux associated with severe cerebral paresis]. 260 3

Ambulatory 24-h pH monitoring in the distal oesophagus represents a widely accepted tool in the diagnosis of gastro-oesophageal reflux disease. When this method was first established, most attention was drawn to the definition of normal oesophageal pH values; various studies correlated morphological findings in the distal oesophagus with the extent of gastro-oesophageal reflux. We have compared different reflux-related variables under different measuring conditions; reflux time (percentage of time with pH below 4) was found to be much more reliable than variables derived from the recognition of single reflux episodes. The special advantage of long-term ambulatory pH monitoring is, however, in our opinion, its capacity for identifying gastro-oesophageal reflux as the primary cause of chest pain in those patients whose oesophagus has an endoscopically normal appearance. For this purpose, it is vital that the recording system be equipped with a reliable event marker; the oesophageal origin is confirmed by detection of a high coincidence between pain attacks and reflux episodes. The evaluation software for ambulatory pH monitoring must therefore allow for diagrammatic display of a complete 24-h recording where the onset of pain attacks is visible within the pH curve.
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PMID:Recommendations for long-term oesophageal pH monitoring. 265 61

Pain of esophageal origin includes heartburn, odynophagia, and spontaneous chest pain. The etiologic causes of esophageal chest pain are varied and include gastroesophageal reflux, esophagitis from radiation, infection, accidental ingestion, medication, and systemic disorders, and motility disorders. Useful tools in the evaluation of patients with suspected esophageal disease include endoscopy, manometry with provocative agents, and prolonged pH and pressure studies.
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PMID:Chest pain of esophageal origin. 266 69

Thirty-one patients about to undergo surgery for gastroesophageal reflux were randomized into either a Nissen fundoplication group (12) or a modified Toupet semifundoplication group (19). All patients were followed on a long-term basis for 5 years with a standard questionnaire, endoscopy, and manometry. Ninety-five percent of the patients in the modified Toupet group had good or excellent results versus 67% for the Nissen group. However both procedures are effective in curtailing esophagitis with an improvement of the endoscopic grading in the Nissen group by 91% and 89% in the group undergoing the modified Toupet procedure. A significant improvement in symptoms (acid regurgitation, heartburn, retrosternal pain) was noted in both groups, except for dysphagia in the Nissen group. Three patients with a Nissen fundoplication had a slipped Nissen requiring reoperation and two had gas-bloat syndrome. These specific complications of the Nissen procedure were not found in the modified Toupet group.
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PMID:A long-term randomized prospective trial of the Nissen procedure versus a modified Toupet technique. 268 67

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

Symptomatic gastroesophageal reflux is a common cause of failure to thrive, aspiration, and chronic pulmonary infection in infants. Gastric emptying was prospectively evaluated in 99 infants and children with symptomatic gastroesophageal reflux. Twenty-eight (28.2%) of 99 patients with gastroesophageal reflux had delayed gastric emptying. Twenty-one (75%) of the 28 patients underwent a concomitant gastric drainage procedure at the time of fundoplication. Seven had fundoplication alone and developed symptoms of early satiety, gas bloat, gagging, and pain postoperatively. Medical therapy was ineffective in these patients, and 5 improved after pyloroplasty. Delayed gastric emptying is common in patients with gastroesophageal reflux. These findings suggest that after fundoplication, symptoms of gagging, early satiety, and gas-bloat syndrome may be related to delayed gastric emptying. This implies that a gastric emptying study should be performed preoperatively.
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PMID:Increased incidence of delayed gastric emptying in children with gastroesophageal reflux. A prospective evaluation. 275 6


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