Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0017168 (
gastroesophageal reflux disease
)
11,783
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Between 1985 and 1987, 25 patients had abdominal operations for hiatal hernia and/or
gastroesophageal reflux disease
. Eight of them had complicated reflux esophagitis. One patient had a Belsey Mark IV repair, the others had a Nissen fundoplication. There was no mortality. After a median follow-up of 16 months (range 3-38) six patients had symptoms of "gas-bloat". The esophagitis was healed in ten patients. 22 patients were completely or fairly satisfied with the results of the surgery. Two patients were not satisfied. Both had complicated reflux esophagitis before they were operated on. Patients with esophagitis should be evaluated for surgery before stricture or Barrett's ulcer develop.
Tidsskr Nor Laegeforen 1989
Sep
30
PMID:[Hiatal hernia and reflux esophagitis]. 281 8
Among 4,411 children hospitalized from May 1985 through April 1987, 100 infants (mean age three months) had exhibited an apparently life-threatening event. Management included careful history taking by interviewing parents, a thorough physical evaluation, routine laboratory tests, and cardiorespiratory monitoring. A variety of further investigations were usually performed to look for
gastroesophageal reflux
(
GER
), vagal hyperreflectivity, or sleep-related cardiorespiratory disorders. Leading causes, that often occurred in combination, included
GER
(66 per cent of cases), and vagal hyperreflectivity (13%). Atypical breath-holding spells, ENT causes, and neurological causes were documented in 8%, 6% and 5% of cases respectively. Medical treatment of the
GER
proved effective in 90% of cases. Metoclopramide (Primperan, 10 drops/kg/d) was effective in 62% of infants with
GER
and was well tolerated. Diphemanil methylsulfate (Prantal, 10 mg/kg/d) satisfactorily controlled vagal hyperreflectivity. Monitoring was prescribed in 43% of cases.
Ann Pediatr (Paris) 1989
Sep
PMID:[Apropos of 100 cases of malaise in infants]. 281 99
If 24-hour esophageal pH monitoring is to be a useful diagnostic tool, it must reliably discriminate
gastroesophageal reflux
patients despite daily variations in distal esophageal acid exposure. To address this issue, we studied 53 subjects (14 healthy normals, 14 esophagitis patients, and 25 patients with atypical symptoms) with two ambulatory pH tests performed within 10 days of each other. Intrasubject reproducibility of 12 pH parameters to discriminate the presence of abnormal acid reflux was determined. As a group, the parameters of percent time with pH less than 4 (total, upright, recumbent) were most reproducible (80%). Therefore, a subject was defined as having
gastroesophageal reflux disease
if at least one of these three values were abnormal. Intrasubject reproducibility for the diagnosis of reflux disease was 89% for the entire sample. Among subsets, the reproducibility was 93% for the normals and esophagitis patients and 84% for the atypical symptom patients. Total percent time with pH less than 4 was the single most discriminate pH parameter (85%) and nearly equaled that of the three combined parameters (89%). The intrasubject variability of this parameter was determined by the mean +/- 2 SD of the relative differences between the two test results for all 53 subjects. Total percent time with pH less than 4 may vary between tests by a factor of 3.2-fold or less (218% higher to 69% lower). We conclude: (1) ambulatory 24-hr esophageal monitoring is a reproducible test for the diagnosis of
gastroesophageal reflux disease
; and (2) the large intrastudy variability in 24-hr total acid exposure may limit this test's usefulness as a measurement of therapeutic improvement.
Dig Dis Sci 1988
Sep
PMID:Ambulatory 24-hour esophageal pH monitoring. Reproducibility and variability of pH parameters. 304 15
Symptoms in patients with hiatal hernia often respond to treatment consisting of diet and medication. Operative procedures, designed to control
gastroesophageal reflux
and avoid surgically induced problems, are reserved for those with intractable symptoms. When these operative procedures fail, reoperation may be necessary. The reoperative procedure is often technically complex because of esophageal and gastric scar fixation. The authors reviewed the surgical management of recurrent hiatal hernia in 168 patients followed up to 5 years or more; 43 of them had undergone gastric surgery previously.Radiologically, 97% patients studied (142 of 146) had no evidence of anatomic recurrence or reflux post operatively. Manometric studies postoperatively in 114 patients showed that the mean tone of the high pressure zone was within the normal range and lower esophageal disordered motor activity was decreased by 34.5% from the preoperative level. Symptoms of recurrent hiatal hernia were abolished by operation in 88% of the patients; only 4.8% had serious or recurrent symptoms.
Can J Surg 1988
Sep
PMID:Review of the surgical management of recurrent hiatal hernia: 5-year follow-up. 304 32
During the five year period December 1980 to November 1985, 106 infants with hypertrophic pyloric stenosis were treated. There were no operative deaths, but two late deaths occurred from associated abnormalities. The combination of preoperative rehydration, skilled anaesthesia, and the use of the Fredet-Ramstedt operation (pyloromyotomy) have virtually eliminated mortality from uncomplicated infantile hypertrophic pyloric stenosis. The most common complications were gastro-
oesophageal reflux
in 11 (11%), perforation of the duodenal fornix in nine (8%), and wound infection in five (5%); no wound dehisced.
Arch Dis Child 1988
Sep
PMID:Recent results of treatment of infantile hypertrophic pyloric stenosis. 317 65
This report reviews 16 years' experience in the management of patients with esophageal atresia (EA) and tracheoesophageal fistula (TEF), with special emphasis on long-term results and early complications in relation to the magnitude of the gap between the esophageal segments. In 94 infants with no or moderate distance between the esophageal ends (less than 2 cm), an end-to-end anastomosis was performed in 90 cases after closing the TEF. In 51 of the 90 patients, no complications were seen (57%), whereas in the remaining 39, postoperative complications were noted with anastomotic leakage (24 patients, 26%), anastomotic stricture (16 patients, 18%) and
gastroesophageal reflux
(5 patients, 5%). Sixteen patients (9 with and 7 without TEF) had a "long gap" between the esophageal segments (greater than 2 cm). Thirteen (9 with and 4 without TEF) of these 16 patients were subjected to an end-to-end anastomosis, 11 primarily and two secondarily after 3 and 12 weeks, respectively. All 13 patients with an end-to-end anastomosis had anastomotic leakage (100%)--nine had stricture (75%) and 5 had
gastroesophageal reflux
(50%). The remaining three patients in this long-gap group were subjected to colon transposition, two primarily and one secondarily. The total mortality rate decreased from 19/57 patients (33%) from 1969 to 1977, to 5/53 (9%) from 1978 to 1984. The main cause of death in both periods was associated anomalies (18% and 7%, respectively), whereas deaths related to the EA malformation as such had almost disappeared during the latter period (15% and 2%, respectively).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
J Pediatr Surg 1988
Sep
PMID:Management of esophageal atresia: review of 16 years' experience. 318 92
Mitral valve prolapse and severe
gastroesophageal reflux
with hiatal hernia were found in a girl aged 2 years, 4 months with Cohen syndrome. The clinical manifestations suggest the presence of a connective tissue disorder in the patient.
Am J Med Genet 1988
Sep
PMID:Cohen syndrome: a connective tissue disorder? 322 94
Literature review (1970-85) indicates excellent or good results following Heller's operation in 89 per cent of 5002 patients. The overall mortality was 2.8 per cent with a reoperation rate of 2.8 per cent. When the operation was done through an abdominal incision, gastro-
oesophageal reflux
was almost twice as common as when it was done through a thoracic incision, regardless of whether an anti-reflux procedure was performed.
Br J Surg 1987
Sep
PMID:Heller's myotomy for achalasia: is an added anti-reflux procedure necessary? 331 Dec 82
Myocardial infarction occurring during pregnancy or the puerperium is a rare condition, occurring in about 1 per 10,000 deliveries, and carries a mortality of approximately 30%. As a consequence of its rarity, symptoms of impending infarction may be easily mistaken by physicians for much more common and innocuous conditions, especially those (such as
gastroesophageal reflux
) typically associated with pregnancy. Two cases of infarction in pregnant women are presented, with a discussion of risk factors which may predispose towards development of coronary artery disease or thrombosis in this population. Other, more uncommon, causes of myocardial infarction during pregnancy are also addressed.
J Forensic Sci 1987
Sep
PMID:Myocardial infarction in pregnancy. 331 71
The results of ambulatory 24 hour oesophageal pH monitoring in 20 patients with established gastro-
oesophageal reflux
disease were compared with those of 20 healthy individuals with normal endoscopy. Cut off limits of pH 3, 4, and 5 were superior to pH 2 with respect to the discrimination of patients from normal subjects, and for the detection of pathological reflux. Using pH 4 as a cut off limit, the ambulant and recumbent periods of pH monitoring were more discriminatory than the postprandial period. Furthermore, it was possible to get complete separation between patients and normal subjects using several combinations of two reflux variables. Another group of 30 patients and 30 controls were investigated. Using percentage time at pH less than 4 as a single determinant of gastro-
oesophageal reflux
, the sensitivity and specificity were 87% and 97%, respectively, with 3.4% as upper limit for normality. Twenty four hour oesophageal pH monitoring in an ambulatory outpatient environment afforded clinically useful diagnostic accuracy in separating patients with gastro-
oesophageal reflux
disease from asymptomatic controls.
Gut 1987
Sep
PMID:Ambulatory 24 hour intraesophageal pH-monitoring in the diagnosis of gastroesophageal reflux disease. 331 81
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>