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)

Acid perfusion with 0.1 n HC1 (5 ml/min for max. 30 min) and simultaneous intragastric instillation of equimolar amounts of sodium bicarbonate were performed in 55 patients with sliding hiatus hernia and symptoms attributable to gastro-oesophageal reflux. Acid perfusion reproduced the patient's spontaneous symptoms, and was thus positive, in 44 per cent of the cases. A positive acid perfusion test means that the patient's spontaneous symptoms may be of oesophageal origin, whereas a negative test does not allow any conclusions. The acid perfusion test was likewise performed before and three months after a modified Belsey MK IV repair in 37 patients with hiatal hernia and symptoms indicating surgical repair. The operation was followed by a reduction in oesophageal acid sensitivity (p less than 0.01).
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PMID:The acid perfusion test. A study in patients with symptomatic hiatus hernia, and of the effect of a modified Belsey MK IV repair on the test. 84 92

2-Camphanone is under clinical evaluation for alleviation of hemorrhoidal bleeding and inflammation. Reduced portal venous blood flow may distend, whereas improved portal venous blood flow may alleviate, hemorrhoidal vein distention. The effects of 2-camphanone on canine portal venous blood flow were investigated using pulsed Doppler flow techniques and on the spontaneous contractions of the isolated rat portal vein. Both intravenous (0.06, 0.2, and 0.6 mg/kg) and transdermal (6 mg/dog on the thigh) administration of 2-camphanone to dogs anesthetized with pentobarbital sodium increased portal venous flow velocity by 20%-30% without affecting femoral arterial blood flow, heart rate, or arterial blood pressure compared with vehicle-treated animals. Transdermal administration of 0.6, 2, and 6 mg of 2-camphanone, in a volume of 0.1 mL, to rats decreased the spontaneous contractions of the isolated rat portal vein in vitro. The data suggest that 2-camphanone exhibits a relatively selective effect on portal venous smooth muscle to reduce venous congestion and increase blood flow velocity. 2-Camphanone may be useful in the treatment not only of hemorrhoids, but also of esophageal reflux and portal hypertension.
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PMID:Effects of 2-camphanone on canine portal vein blood flow and rat smooth muscle. 173 10

Endoscopic sclerosis of the gastric cardia (ESGC) prevents experimental gastroesophageal reflux (GER) without changes in lower esophageal sphincter (LES) pressure and length. This study was performed to define the histologic appearance of the esophagus and stomach one year after ESGC. Four dogs were studied one year after ESGC with morrhuate sodium; ESGC had been performed at six sites, 1-3 cm distal to the esophagogastric junction. All animals had stable weight and eating habits at sacrifice. Light microscopy of the cardia and LES included morphometry of wall thickness (mm) and assessment of fibrosis (- to ). The esophagus had minimal changes; the gastric cardia had focal fibrosis, maximal on the greater curve, without any change difference in wall thickness. ESGC results in fibrosis of the gastric cardia, without significant changes in the esophagus. These changes prevent GER, possibly by preventing the initiation of a reflux event.
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PMID:Fibrosis of gastric cardia after endoscopic sclerosis. Mechanism for control of experimental reflux? 231 37

Eighty-three children presenting with symptomatic gastro-esophageal reflux (GER) (48 males, 35 females, aged 15 days to 57 months (mean = 7 months) were assessed by pH monitoring. All showed acid pathological GER on the 3 hours post-prandial esophageal pH measurement (% of time at pH less than 4 greater than 4.2) and all had a second pH measurement within the following 3 hours after intake of a single (5 ml) dose of sodium alginate (AGS). AGS administration was followed by a highly significant reduction (p less than 0.00001) of all pH measurement variables: a) Percentage of time spent at pH less than 4 returned to normal with a mean 11.7% to 4.8%; that is a 52.5% improvement (median); b) Total number of reflux reduced on average from 8.9 to 5.0: that is a 35% improvement (median); c) Mean duration of reflux reduced on average for 4 to 2 min; that is a 60% improvement (median). In 76 patients hourly monitoring of % of time spent at pH less than 4 shows that hourly improvement persists.
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PMID:[Pharmacologic efficacy of sodium alginate suspension on gastro-esophageal reflux in infants and children]. 232 80

The effects of patient physiology and the prior administration of a nondepolarizing muscle relaxant on the frequency of gastroesophageal reflux during induction with thiopental sodium and succinylcholine were investigated. Forty patients underwent anesthetic induction during continuous esophageal pH monitoring. Twenty patients had preoperative symptoms of gastroesophageal reflux, and 20 asymptomatic patients served as controls. Half the patients in each group received a small dose of nondepolarizing muscle relaxant prior to induction. Five patients (25%) with gastroesophageal reflux and none of the control patients showed significant decreases in esophageal pH during induction. Two of these patients received prior administration of a nondepolarizing drug. In all five patients, reflux occurred during laryngoscopy and intubation, suggesting the possibility that succinylcholine did not play a role in the generation of reflux. Preoperative gastroesophageal reflux symptomatology is associated with an increased frequency of reflux during induction, and the vulnerable period seems to occur after the achievement of neuromuscular blockade during laryngoscopy. Preinduction administration of a non-depolarizing muscle relaxant prior to succinylcholine use had no demonstrable effect on the frequency of reflux during induction, although the numbers studied were too small to be conclusive.
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PMID:Gastroesophageal reflux during anesthetic induction with thiopental and succinylcholine. 235 57

The purpose of this study was to ascertain the pharmacological effectiveness of sodium alginate liquid in the treatment of gastroesophageal acid reflux. The pharmacological test selected was 3 hours postprandial oesophageal pH, because of the physico-chemical properties of this drug. Twenty-one patients of both sexes were included in this study. The initial pH measurement served both as inclusion criteria, by confirming the presence of gastric acid reflux, and as reference for the evaluation of the effect of sodium alginate liquid by a second pH determination after treatment. After treatment with sodium alginate liquid, the number and mean duration of episodes of reflux, as well as the time spent at each pH level, had significantly decreased as compared to the initial value. The gastroesophageal reflux score was significantly reduced during the second hour in recumbent posture, but none of the different parameters studied separately (number and mean duration of episodes of reflux and time spent at each pH level) was significantly decreased. This study demonstrates the pharmacological effectiveness of the drug during the post prandial period and indicates that it is more effective in upright than in supine position.
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PMID:[Reduction of postprandial gastroesophageal reflux with sodium alginate in suspension. Multicenter pH study in 21 patients]. 296 52

Oesophageal injury secondary to gastro-oesophageal reflux is unlikely to be due to the effects of hydrochloric acid alone. The present authors have investigated the development of acid and bile salt-induced oesophageal mucosal injury in a rabbit model. Solutions of hydrochloric acid and sodium taurocholate (ST) were perfused through an isolated oesophageal preparation and mucosal injury was determined by measuring the rate of H+ disappearance. Perfusion with acid alone in concentrations up to 10 mmol/l did not affect the H+ disappearance rate. Addition of 1 mmol/l ST to an acid perfusate resulted in loss of H+ from the system. The increase in H+ disappearance rate was associated with loss of ST from the perfusate. Sodium taurocholate was only lost from the system when in an acid medium. Increased rate of H+ disappearance occurred even after the bile salt had been washed out of the perfused oesophagus. The mechanism of bile salt-induced mucosal injury was unlikely to be due to mucosal disruption secondary to micelle formation since the critical micellar concentration of taurocholate was found to be greater than that used in the perfusate. These findings indicate that bile salts may be an important factor in hydrochloric acid-related damage to oesophageal mucosa, by acting through mechanisms unrelated to micelle formation.
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PMID:Bile salt-induced injury of rabbit oesophageal mucosa measured by hydrogen ion disappearance. 303 65

Wistar male rats weighing 230-250 g were given 10 mg aminopyrine and 10 mg sodium nitrite daily, by gavage, for 20 days. The histological changes in the liver are of the cirrhotic type. The ultrastructural changes are dependent on the hepatocyte position in the hepatic structural changes are dependent on the hepatocyte position in the hepatic lobule. Thus, in the perilobular area one finds hepatocytes with an increased volume and hypertrophic nuclei and nucleoli, mitochondriae swollen with dispersed cristae, decrease of the number of free ribosomes, glycogen depletion, GER decrease and SER development. In the centrolobular area, the most injured, there are necrotic changes with numerous cytolysosomal formations. The histoenzymological results show a decrease of LDH, SDH, CyOx, GtDH, StDH, ATP-ase and G6P activities. The activity of Ac.P on the contrary, is greater in the intoxicated rats, which correlates with the above-mentioned necrobiosis processes.
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PMID:Histoenzymological and ultrastructural changes in rats following the administration of aminopyrine and nitrite (nitrosoaminopyrine). 626 34

The pathogenesis of oesophagitis associated with ethanol ingestion was studied experimentally by perfusing isolated rabbit oesophagus in situ with 20% and 40% (v/v) ethanol. Since ingestion of ethanol increases duodenogastric and gastro-oesophageal reflux, the effects of HCl and bile salts (in combination with ethanol) were also investigated. The severity of oesophageal mucosal damage was assessed by using transmucosal potential difference, net ion fluxes of H+ and Na+, and mucosal permeability to two neutral molecules of different sizes, 3H-H2O and 14C-erythritol, as indicators of mucosal integrity. Macroscopic changes in the mucosa were also recorded. The results showed that the lower ethanol concentration (20%) is relatively harmless to the oesophageal mucosa. Furthermore, addition of 20% ethanol did not intensify the effects on the mucosa caused by HCl or bile salts alone. In contrast, the stronger ethanol solution (40%) did cause significant mucosal damage when used alone, and this damage was further potentiated by the presence of HCl.
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PMID:Ethanol-induced mucosal injury in rabbit oesophagus. 666 35

1. The mechanisms that underlie the Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS) must explain its two unique features; age at death and death during apparent sleep. 2. The occurrence of gastro-oesophageal reflux (GOR) during active sleep in infants presenting with apparent life threatening episodes (ALTE) and their similar age distribution to SIDS infants, suggested that reflux could be a cause of asphyxia. 3. Sleep related GOR was found to be a physiological and not a pathological event in normal, healthy term infants. 4. In healthy term infants, those infants that were formula-fed (who have a higher incidence of SIDS) had significantly longer oesophageal clearance times for acid reflux and significantly more active sleep compared with breast fed infants. 5. In very preterm infants (who are at increased risk for SIDS), both the frequency and duration of reflux during active sleep was significantly less at term equivalent age compared with healthy term infants, suggesting additional factors must operate to promote an ALTE. 6. One mechanism which may explain the pathogenesis of GOR could be that the reflux reaches the level of the pharynx and this, in turn, stimulates laryngeal receptors to produce apnoea. 7. Simulated reflux to the level of the pharynx in the sleeping piglet evoked airway protective responses, namely swallow, arousal and occasionally expectoration, but neither apnoea nor oxygen desaturation. 8. In the same piglets treated with pentobarbitone sodium, swallowing was impaired and arousal depressed. Simulated reflux to the pharynx produced significant apnoea and oxygen desaturation and death in two of five piglets.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Physiological studies of gastro-oesophageal reflux and airway protective responses in the young animal and human infant. 758 11


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