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)
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.
...
PMID:[Apropos of 100 cases of malaise in infants]. 281 99
In a prospective study, 180 infants, mean age 2-6 months, hospitalized for apparent life threatening events between October 1985 and September 1988 (for 7,261 infants admitted into the pediatric unit during the same period), were submitted to the following investigations: careful anamnesis, complete clinical examination, systematic paraclinical investigations (standard biological studies, infectious and metabolic tests, investigations for gastro
esophageal reflux
(GER) and vagal hyper-reflectivity (VHR), polysomnography) or adapted to the clinical situation (toxic tests, brain computed scan, laryngoscopy, etc). Pathologies were mainly functional with neuro-vegetative immaturity (67.5%): gastro
esophageal reflux
(49%), vagal hyper-reflectivity (8.5%) or both (10%). An incidental pathological factor (breath holding spell, convulsion, intoxication, infection) was found in 18.5% of the infants, and 14% had normal results.
Diphemanil
10 mg/kg/24h corrected the VHR and Metoclopramide 1 mg/kg/24h controlled 52% of the GER. The recurrence rate of illness in the GER and VHR groups was statistically lower with efficient therapy (12% vs 48%); no recurrence occurred in other groups.
...
PMID:[Study of risk factors for recurrence in severe life-threatening conditions in infants]. 839 95