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Query: UMLS:C0017168 (
gastroesophageal reflux disease
)
11,783
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Transient lower oesophageal sphincter relaxation (LOSR) is the major mechanism underlying gastro-
oesophageal reflux
. The mediation and control of LOSRs are incompletely understood but evidence suggests a neural inhibitory mechanism. In this study we have evaluated the effect of gastric distension on LOS function in 16 patients with untreated idiopathic achalasia and compared it with that in 10 healthy controls. With the subjects sitting, the stomach was distended with a liquid mixture that generated 750 ml
CO2
. Oesophageal pH and motility were monitored for 10 minutes before and after distension. In normal controls, gastric distension induced a four-fold increase in the rate of LOSRs and gas reflux episodes (as evidenced by oesophageal common cavities), whereas this response was absent in the achalasia patients. Basal LOS pressure did not change in either group. These findings are consistent with the notion that transient LOSRs induced by gastric distension are neurally mediated, probably by the same inhibitory nerves that govern swallow mediated LOS relaxation.
...
PMID:Failure of transient lower oesophageal sphincter relaxation in response to gastric distension in patients with achalasia: evidence for neural mediation of transient lower oesophageal sphincter relaxations. 275 98
Gastroesophageal reflux
(
GER
) was initially diagnosed in two black infants, aged 5 and 9 months, as a cause of their chronic lung disease and failure to thrive. Both infants were treated with bethanechol chloride as part of the management of their
GER
, but respiratory failure developed in both patients and they required ventilatory support. Both infants had severe air trapping,
CO2
retention, difficulty in being weaned from mechanical ventilation, and Staphylococcus aureus cultured from their respiratory tract secretions. These factors led to the suspicion of cystic fibrosis (CF), and this diagnosis was subsequently confirmed by sweat test. The condition of both infants improved substantially on withdrawal of bethanechol therapy and the institution of a regimen of CF care. The early diagnosis of
GER
in these infants may have led to a delay in diagnosis and treatment of CF.
...
PMID:Cystic fibrosis and gastroesophageal reflux in infancy. 396 86
A healthy neonatal piglet model was developed to investigate the effects of simulated gastro-
esophageal reflux
(GER) on airway protective mechanisms in different sleep states. Piglets were chosen for the model because there are similarities in esophageal morphology, development of the cardiorespiratory system and sleep-wakefulness cycle between the piglet and the human infant. Unanesthetized piglets were instrumented and trained to sleep in a radiolucent, temperature-controlled box. Physiologic recordings of sleep (electroencephalogram, 'ear-o-gram', behavioral observations), cardiorespiratory function (end-tidal
CO2
, O2 saturation, heart rate, respiratory movements), swallowing (pharyngeal or esophageal pressures) and GER (signaled by a fall in esophageal pH) were displayed and stored on a computer. An image intensifier was used for radiographic observations. The outputs from the computer and image intensifier were synchronized and recorded on videotape. The method enabled simultaneous physiologic and radiographic observations to be made during the simulation of GER by the injection of normal NaCl, distilled water or HCl (pH 2 and 3) into either the pharynx or different sites in the esophagus. The piglet model appears to accurately reflect the normal physiologic responses of the healthy sleeping neonate.
...
PMID:A method for simultaneous physiological and radiographic recordings from sleeping neonatal piglets. 767 62
The authors report on their clinical experiences concerning 100 cases of chronic lingual tonsillitis. The surgical treatment employed was endoscopic vaporization of affected tissues with the
CO2
laser. Prior to surgical intervention, predisposing conditions such as allergy, rhinosinusitis, and
gastroesophageal reflux
were identified and treated. The surgical technique consisted of progressive vaporization of the lymphoid tissue at the base of the tongue until the lingual fascia was reached. A slightly defocused (700 mm) continuous 10-15 W laser beam was used at a working distance of 400 mm. Following surgery, no dyspnea was observed secondary to epiglottic edema and only one patient required postoperative hemostasis. Symptoms related to tonsil or tongue inflammation were eliminated or alleviated in 87 patients, remained unchanged in 12 patients and were worse in 1 patient.
...
PMID:Treatment of lingual tonsillitis by transoral CO2 laser endoscopy. 798 96
Control of breathing, bronchomotor tone and lung function are inferior to circadian rhythms, which can already be demonstrated at healthy subjects. They get relevant especially at patients with obstructive airway disease and sleep disturbances. Particularly in the early morning hours flow resistance in the airways and in the nose rises. Several different mechanisms are suspected to be responsible: Allergen exposure in bed, supine position, interruption of the bronchodilator therapy, gastro-
oesophageal reflux
, tenseness of the airways and secretory accumulation. Connected to nocturnal asthma might also be an increased airway responsiveness. Several factors contribute to nocturnal asthma, but they don't constitute a general concept for the explanation of nightly exacerbations. Many hormonal neural cellular and humoral factors show diurnal fluctuations which favour a constrictive bronchial response in the night. Diurnal or ultradian changes in O2 and
CO2
sensitivity only play a minor role. However, we have to realise alterations in the responses of the central neuronal control mechanisms of breathing within the respiratory cycle. Oscillations of arterial
CO2
partial pressure or pH-values influence tidal volume and ventilation directly. Circadian changes of different vital functions cause minor alterations in airway responsiveness and airway resistance in normal subjects, however in patients with asthma they are enlarged in amplitude and become relevant especially in the night and early morning hours.
...
PMID:[Chronobiology of the bronchial system]. 924 91
A 32-year-old patient experienced a postoperative acute myopericarditis following laparoscopic surgery for gastro-
oesophageal reflux
(Toupet's fundoplication). His medical history was unremarkable, apart from controlled arterial hypertension. Peroperative circulation was stable, except a short hypertensive episode at
CO2
insufflation, controlled with nicardipine. A myopericarditis occurred at the fourth postoperative hour, with apical and inferior hypokinesia at ventriculography, ST-segment elevation with unremarkable coronary arteriography. The patient was discharged at day seven, with a NSAIDs treatment. Echocardiography three and nine months later postoperatively, showed an apical akinesia and persistence of the ST-segment modification, without clinical symptoms. Complications of laparoscopic fundoplication is either specific to surgery (gastro-oesophageal injury, diaphragmatic injury, mediastinitis, stenosis) or secondary to pneumoperitoneum (pneumothorax, carbon dioxide embolism). In this case, following an apparently uncomplicated laparoscopy and, except a direct cardiac trauma from a laparoscopic instrument, either coronary artery spasm, or pneumopericardium with
CO2
, or delayed gas embolism, or preoperative "silent" myopericarditis could be the potential cause of this cardiac complication.
...
PMID:[Acute myopericarditis following laparoscopic treatment of gastroesophageal reflux]. 983 86
Laparoscopic fundoplication is increasingly used for treating gastro-
esophageal reflux disease
in children. Mechanical and pharmacological effects may contribute to hemodynamic and respiratory changes during carbon dioxide pneumoperitoneum. The aim of the present study was to evaluate the hemodynamic and respiratory effects of pneumoperitoneum (PP) with an intra-abdominal pressure (IAP) of 12 mmHg in children undergoing robot-assisted laparoscopic fundoplication during total intravenous anesthesia. Ten children, aged 8-16 years, American Society of Anesthesiologists physical status II-III, scheduled for robot-assisted laparoscopic fundoplication in the reverse Trendelenburg position were investigated. Minute ventilation (MV), peak inspiratory pressure (PIP), IAP, heart rate (HR), mean arterial blood pressure (MAP) were recorded, together with pH, base excess, HCO3-, P(et)
CO2
, PaCO2, and PaO2 at six time points: before insufflation, 10, 30, 60, 90 minutes after creating PP and after desufflation. The IAP was maintained at 12 mmHg. During insufflation MAP increased significantly from 70.6 (+/-9.0) to 84.8 (+/-10.4) mmHg, MV was increased from 4.6 (+/-0.8) to 5.5 (+/-0.9) l min(-1), PIP increased, PaO2 and pH decreased. P(et)
CO2
increased from 33.1 (+/-1.6) to 36.6 (+/-1.6) mmHg together with PaCO2. Hemodynamic and respiratory effects due to the intra-abdominal insufflation of
CO2
with an IAP of 12 mmHg are well tolerated, and anesthesia with remifentanil, propofol and mivacurium facilitates extubation immediately at the end of surgery.
...
PMID:Hemodynamic and respiratory effects of robot-assisted laparoscopic fundoplication in children. 1582 50
Laparoscopic Nissen fundoplication was first undertaken in the early 1990s. Appreciable numbers of patients with 10-year follow up are only now available. This study assesses long-term outcome and durability of outcome after laparoscopic Nissen fundoplication for treatment of gastro-
esophageal reflux disease
. Since 1991, 829 patients have undergone laparoscopic fundoplications and are prospectively followed. Two hundred thirty-nine patients, 44 per cent male, with a median age of 53 years (+/- 15 standard deviation) underwent laparoscopic Nissen fundoplications at least 10 years ago; 28 (12%) patients were "redo" fundoplications. Before and after fundoplication, among many symptoms, patients scored the frequency and severity of dysphagia, chest pain, vomiting, regurgitation, choking, and heartburn using a Likert scale (0 = never/not bothersome to 10 = always/very bothersome). Symptom scores before versus after fundoplication were compared using a Wilcoxon matched-pairs test. Data are reported as median, mean +/- standard deviation, when appropriate. After fundoplication, length of stay was 2 days, 3 days +/- 4.8. Intra-operative inadvertent events were uncommon and without sequela: 1 esophagotomy, 1 gastrotomy, 3 cardiac dysrhythmias, and 3
CO2
pneumothoraces. Complications after fundoplication included: 1 postpneumonic empyema, 3 urinary retentions, 2 superficial wound infections, 1 urinary tract infection, 1 ileus, and 1 intraabdominal abscess. There were two perioperative deaths; 88 per cent of the patients are still alive. After laparoscopic Nissen fundoplication, frequency and severity scores dramatically improved for all symptoms queried (P < 0.001), especially for heartburn frequency (8, 8 +/- 3.2 versus 2, 3 +/- 2.8, P < 0.001) and severity (10, 8 +/- 2.9 versus 1, 2 +/- 2.5, P < 0.001). Eighty per cent of patients rate their symptoms as almost completely resolved or greatly improved, and 85 per cent note they would again have the laparoscopic fundoplication as a result of analysis of our initial experience, thereby promoting superior outcomes in the future. Nonetheless, follow up at 10 years and beyond of our initial experience documents that laparoscopic fundoplication durably provides high patient satisfaction resulting from long-term amelioration of the frequency and severity of symptoms of
gastroesophageal reflux disease
. These results promote further application of laparoscopic Nissen fundoplication.
...
PMID:Ten-year follow up after laparoscopic Nissen fundoplication for gastroesophageal reflux disease. 1787 78
All the classification of precancerous lesions are based on the progression of specific histopathological characteristics, which in turn considers the grade of epithelial hyperplasia and dysplasia, nevertheless the transformation of laryngeal keratosis into carcinoma occurs through progressive modifications of normal epithelium in keratosis without dysplasia, to the point of degenerating into carcinoma in situ. The treatment of laringeal precancerosis has not yet defined a gold standard: according to some authors, a simple excision biopsy may be sufficient, others, instead, perform the stripping of the involved vocal cord, while others yet perform vaporization by means of
CO2
laser. The aim of this paper is to evaluate and possibly validate the treatment of mild and moderate laryngeal dysplasia (LIN1-2) by
CO2
laser, with particular attention to oncological and functional results. Fifty-eight patients (44 males and 14 females, mean age 54.3 years) affected by mild and moderate dysplasia (32 LIN I and 26 LIN II) diagnosed by a bioptic exam, were treated by performing a
CO2
laser cordectomy (following the European Society of Laryngology's criteria). Before surgery to the patients was given a questionnaire to identify primary risk factors such as smoking, alcohol use and
gastroesophageal reflux
, were also handed a Vocal Performance Questionnaire. In all patients was performed a pH measurement over a 24-h period, a voice evaluation using a Kay digital Strobe 920. 84% of patients were smokers; the presence of reflux was reported in 11 patients (19%). The 32 LIN1 cases treated with type I cordectomy determined four recurrences (12.4%), of which two LIN1, one LIN2 and one carcinoma in situ. Of the 26 LIN2 cases examined, the 12 treated with type 1 cordectomy generated 1 recurrence alone with the presence of an invasive carcinoma (T1a) (8.3%), while no recurrences were reported in the group of 14 LIN2 cases treated with type II cordectomy. 93.1% (54/58) of cases showed a complete closing of the glottal plane over time. Considering the results in terms of disease control, and functional outcomes, our experience suggests subepithelial cordectomy (ELS I) for LIN 1 and subligament cordectomy (ELS II) for LIN 1 recurrences; therefore we suggest subligament cordectomy (ELS II) in LIN 2 cases.
...
PMID:Treatment with laser CO2 cordectomy and clinical implications in management of mild and moderate laryngeal precancerosis. 1796 71
Lung transplantation has become an excellent treatment option for patients with cystic fibrosis (CF) and bronchiectasis with very advanced lung disease. Despite the challenges that the CF patients present, survival is more favorable than that seen in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and pulmonary fibrosis. Although those CF and bronchiectasis patients with severe respiratory disease are often infected with organisms that display in vitro resistance to the commonly used antibiotics, they usually have successful outcomes with transplantation, which are reported to be the same as in those patients with less resistant bacteria. Preoperative synergy testing has been demonstrated to reduce the presence of postoperative bacteremia and empyema in patients with CF. Newer challenges include the increasing presence of nontuberculous mycobacteria and in particular the rapid grower Mycobacterium abscessus, for which patient-to-patient spread has been recently recognized. The increased recognition of
gastroesophageal reflux
offers challenges regarding when and to whom one should offer fundoplication. Most potential CF recipients have metabolic bone disease warranting treatment, especially with the significant loss of bone density seen in the first year after transplantation. Diabetes mellitus, renal dysfunction, and hypertension and their consequences remain common and are of increasing importance as median survival increases in excess of 10 years. With increased experience, more programs are now transplanting patients who require membrane oxygenator support in addition to noninvasive ventilation pretransplantation and the use of a membrane device in the awake patient principally to remove excessive
CO2
and reduce acidemia is worthy of note (Novalung; Novalung GmbH, Heilbronn, Federal Republic of Germany). Many centers now take the view that an awake and ambulant patient receiving such support represents a more favorable option than an intubated patient. The limiting factor in lung transplantation remains the number of organs available. Efforts to increase the donor pool, such as low tidal volume ventilation, are effective in allowing a greater percentage of offered organs to be accepted. Perhaps the most encouraging development, however, is that of ex vivo lung perfusion. This permits not only the ability to measure the function of the lungs, something of great value for lungs from donors with circulatory death (donation after cardiac death), but also the potential to introduce lung repair and convert a nonusable lung to one that can be safely used for transplantation.
...
PMID:Lung transplantation for cystic fibrosis and bronchiectasis. 2382 5
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