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

Lower oesophageal pH was monitored in 240 anaesthetised dogs. The incidence of gastro-oesophageal reflux was 16.3 per cent and most of the reflux episodes occurred shortly after the induction of anaesthesia. The refluxate was nearly always acid (pH < 4.0), but in 10.3 per cent of the cases it was alkaline (pH > 7.5); gastric contents of pH below 2.5 were refluxed on 19 occasions (7.9 per cent). Regurgitation occurred in only one dog. Prolonging preoperative fasting was associated with an increased incidence of reflux and increased gastric acidity. Premedication with diazepam was associated with fewer reflux episodes than premedication with atropine and propionylpromazine.
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PMID:Gastro-oesophageal reflux during anaesthesia in the dog: the effect of preoperative fasting and premedication. 857 60

Lower oesophageal pH was monitored in 270 dogs under anaesthesia. There were 47 episodes of gastro-oesophageal reflux (17.4 per cent), most of which occurred shortly after the induction of anaesthesia. The refluxate was usually acid (pH < 4.0), but in four of the episodes (8.5 per cent) it was alkaline (pH > 7.5). Gastric contents with a pH below 2.5 were refluxed on 27 occasions (10 per cent) for an average period of about 44 minutes. Regurgitation occurred in two of the dogs. Increased age seemed to be associated with an increased incidence of reflux and an increased gastric acidity. Body position (sternal, dorsal and left or right lateral) and the tilt of the body during surgery (horizontal or tilted to an 8 degrees head-up or head-down position) had no influence on the incidence of gastro-oesophageal reflux. Dogs undergoing intra-abdominal surgery had significantly more reflux episodes than dogs undergoing non-abdominal surgery.
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PMID:Gastro-oesophageal reflux during anaesthesia in the dog: the effect of age, positioning and type of surgical procedure. 858 77

Nasogastric (NG) tubes are routinely used in patients undergoing cardiac surgery. This randomized study was designed to assess gastroesophageal reflux (GER) without a NG tube (control) compared with a NG tube managed either by gravity drainage (gravity) or continuous low-grade suction (suction). Antimony pH probes were placed in the lower esophagus and trachea after induction of anesthesia in 51 patients, and pH was recorded every 5 s until the time of tracheal extubation. GER was defined as reversible decrease in esophageal pH to less than 4.0. No significant difference was found between groups in age, weight, gender, duration of postoperative ventilation, morphine use, or antiemetic use. All indicators of GER were seen more frequently in the gravity group compared with the two other groups (P < 0.001). One episode of sudden decrease in tracheal pH was observed in a patient in the gravity group, indicating tracheal aspiration, which was associated with delayed extubation and postoperative pneumonia. The absence of a NG tube is not associated with reflux, probably since the gastroesophageal sphincter remains competent. NG tubes are not routinely necessary for cardiac surgery in patients without risk factors for GER, and increase reflux risk if managed without low-grade suction.
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PMID:Gastroesophageal reflux and tracheobronchial contamination after cardiac surgery: should a nasogastric tube be routine? 869 97

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

The incidence of gastro-oesophageal reflux in children undergoing general anaesthesia has not previously been studied. One-hundred-and-twenty children (ASA Class 1-2) were studied intraoperatively using continuous oesophageal pH monitoring. The incidence of reflux was 2.5% (3 of 120). None of these three patients had an adverse respiratory event. There was no correlation between reflux and adverse respiratory events. Thirteen patients had minor respiratory events without evidence of acid reflux. Gastro-oesophageal reflux does occur in healthy paediatric patients having minor surgery, but was not a significant cause of the adverse respiratory events that occurred in our study.
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PMID:Gastro-oesophageal reflux and adverse respiratory events in children under anaesthesia. 878 59

A 2-year-old child was admitted with bilateral bronchopneumonia. During convalescence he sustained sudden respiratory arrest for which he required ventilatory support. He had undergone cholecystectomy 1 month prior to the above episode. The pathological examination of the gall bladder mass had revealed the features of metachromatic leukodystrophy. Gastro-oesophageal reflux, which is associated with this neurological disorder, was suspected to be the cause of this sudden respiratory arrest and its presence was confirmed by barium swallow examination.
Anaesthesia 1997 Jul
PMID:An unusual presentation in a patient with metachromatic leukodystrophy. 924 31

Dysphagia and recurrent gastroesophageal reflux complicate use of the Angelchik prosthesis. The authors developed an inflatable silicone device, similar to the Angelchik prosthesis, that may allow for the adjustment of the total pressure exerted around the gastroesophageal junction after implantation. To estimate its potential to prevent gastroesophageal reflux in humans, we used a short-term porcine model in which we measured the effective lower esophageal sphincter pressure in 10 anesthetized pigs using a computerized, three dimensional pressure vector volume analysis. Anesthesia and mobilization of the gastroesophageal junction did not modify the three dimensional pressure vector volume at the lower esophageal sphincter. Implantation of the deflated device significantly increased effective lower esophageal sphincter three dimensional pressure vector volume compared with baseline. Inflation of the device with 30 ml of saline further increased lower esophageal sphincter pressure significantly. Deflation of the device returned the pressure to the pre-inflation values. Using an animal model and short-term implantation, this new antireflux device appeared to offer the potential ability to adjust the pressure selectively at the gastroesophageal junction postoperatively. An added future feature of this device may be the ease of insertion using laparoscopic techniques. Long-term animal implantation studies and clinical trials are required to help establish the safety and efficacy of this device in humans.
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PMID:Development of an adjustable prosthesis for the treatment of gastroesophageal reflux: preliminary results in a porcine model. 961 42

Gastro-oesophageal reflux and heartburn are reported by 45 to 85% of women during pregnancy. Typically, the heartburn of pregnancy is new onset and is precipitated by the hormonal effects of estrogen and progesterone on lower oesophageal sphincter function. In mild cases, the patient should be reassured that reflux is commonly encountered during a normal pregnancy: lifestyle and dietary modifications may be all that are required. In a pregnant woman with moderate to severe reflux symptoms, the physician must discuss with the patient the benefits versus the risks of using drug therapy. Medications used for treating gastro-oesophageal reflux are not routinely or vigorously tested in randomised, controlled trials in women who are pregnant because of ethical and medico-legal concerns. Safety data are based on animal studies, human case reports and cohort studies as offered by physicians, pharmaceutical companies and regulatory authorities. If drug therapy is required, first-line therapy should consist of nonsystemically absorbed medications, including antacids or sucralfate, which offer little, if any, risk to the fetus. Systemic therapy with histamine H2 receptor antagonists (avoiding nizatidine) or prokinetic drugs (metoclopramide, cisapride) should be reserved for patients with more severe symptoms. Proton pump inhibitors are not recommended during pregnancy except for severe intractable cases of gastrooesophageal reflux or possibly prior to anaesthesia during labour and delivery. In these rare situations, animal teratogenicity studies suggests that lansoprazole may be the best choice. Use of the least possible amount of systemic drug needed to ameliorate the patient's symptoms is clearly the best for therapy. If reflux symptoms are intractable or atypical, endoscopy can safely be performed with conscious sedation and careful monitoring the mother and fetus.
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PMID:Treating gastro-oesophageal reflux disease during pregnancy and lactation: what are the safest therapy options? 980 46

This study aimed to evaluate whether or not the use of intermittent positive pressure ventilation via the laryngeal mask airway is associated with a higher risk of gastro-oesophageal reflux when compared with intermittent positive pressure ventilation via a tracheal tube in patients undergoing day case gynaecological laparoscopy in the head down position. Sixty healthy women were randomly allocated to receive either the laryngeal mask or cuffed tracheal tube for intra-operative airway maintenance. Using continuous oesophageal pH monitoring, four patients in the tracheal tube group and none in the laryngeal mask group had evidence of gastro-oesophageal reflux (as indicated by a decrease in oesophageal pH to below 4). The difference in the incidence of reflux did not achieve statistical significance (p = 0.11). In conclusion, we found no evidence to suggest that the use of intermittent positive pressure ventilation via the laryngeal mask increases the risk of gastro-oesophageal reflux in patients undergoing elective day case gynaecological laparoscopy.
Anaesthesia 1998 Sep
PMID:Gastro-oesophageal reflux during day case gynaecological laparoscopy under positive pressure ventilation: laryngeal mask vs. tracheal intubation. 1036 82

We have studied the incidence of gastro-oesophageal reflux associated with the laryngeal mask airway (LMA) in 82 paralysed patients undergoing ventilation for elective orthopaedic surgery. Anaesthesia was managed by skilled LMA users. A pH-sensitive probe was passed nasally into the oesophagus before induction and recordings made during five phases of anaesthesia. Anaesthesia was induced with propofol and fentanyl and maintained with 0.5-1.5% isoflurane and nitrous oxide in oxygen. Neuromuscular block was produced with vecuronium and the train-of-four count maintained at < or = 1. Towards the end of surgery, neuromuscular function was allowed to recover spontaneously. All LMAs were inserted at the first attempt and ventilation was successful in all patients. There were no adverse airway events. Mean oesophageal pH values during each phase of anaesthesia were: before insertion 5.88 (SD 0.77), placement 5.85 (0.74), maintenance 5.89 (0.73), emergence 5.71 (0.78) and removal 5.82 (0.75). There were no reflux events (pH < 4.0) during any phase of anaesthesia. We conclude that the incidence of gastro-oesophageal reflux is low in paralysed patients undergoing ventilation for elective orthopaedic surgery when antagonism of neuromuscular block is avoided. The validity of these findings for unskilled LMA users is unknown.
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PMID:Laryngeal mask airway and incidence of gastro-oesophageal reflux in paralysed patients undergoing ventilation for elective orthopaedic surgery. 992 28


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