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)

Severe obesity is associated with multiple comorbidities and is refractory to dietary management with or without behavioral or drug therapies. There are a number of surgical procedures for the treatment of morbid obesity, including purely gastric restrictive, a combination of malabsorption and gastric restriction or primary malabsorption. The purely gastric restrictive procedures, including vertical banded gastroplasty and laparoscopic adjustable silicone gastric banding, do not provide adequate weight loss. African-American patients do especially poorly after the banding procedure with the loss of only 11% of excess weight in one study. Gastric bypass (GBP) is associated with the loss of 66% of excess weight at 1 to 2 years after surgery, 60% at 5 years and 50% at 10 years. For unknown reasons, African-American patients lose significantly less weight than Caucasians after GBP. There is a risk of micronutrient deficiencies after GBP, including iron deficiency anemia in menstruating women, vitamin B12, and calcium deficiencies. Prophylactic supplementation of these nutrients is necessary. Recurrent vomiting after bariatric surgery may be associated with a severe polyneuropathy and must be aggressively treated with endoscopic dilatation before this complication is allowed to develop. The malabsorptive procedures include the partial biliopancreatic bypass (BPD) and BPD with duodenal switch (BPD/DS). The BPD appears to cause severe protein-calorie malnutrition in American patients; the BPD/DS may be associated with less malnutrition. Weight loss failure after GBP does not respond to tightening a dilated gastrojejunal stoma or reducing the size of the gastric pouch. These patients may require conversion to a malabsorptive distal GBP, similar to the BPD. However, because of the risk of severe protein-calorie malnutrition and calcium deficiency BPD should be reserved for patients with severe obesity comorbidity. The risk of death following bariatric surgery is between 1% and 2% in most series but is significantly higher in patients with respiratory insufficiency of obesity. In most patients, surgically induced weight loss will correct hypertension, type II diabetes mellitus, sleep apnea, obesity hypoventilation syndrome, gastroesophageal reflux, venous stasis disease, urinary incontinence, female sexual hormone dysfunction, pseudotumor cerebri, degenerative joint disease pains, as well as improved self-image and employability.
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PMID:Bariatric surgery for severe obesity. 1185 Dec 1

Achalasia is an idiopathic neuromuscular disorder of the esophagus which is associated with absence of esophageal peristalsis and incomplete relaxation of a normal or raised lower esophageal sphincter (LES). Dysphagia is the most commonly associated symptom. Conventional therapeutic approaches are directed to reducing LES pressure and include orally-administered smooth muscle relaxants, forceful sphincter dilation with balloon dilators, and open or laparoscopic-assisted myotomy of the LES. Pharmacologic therapies have a low success rate. Forceful dilation has a perforation complication rate of 2% to 5%, and myotomies may precipitate significant gastroesophageal reflux, a complication minimized when a partial fundal wrap is employed simultaneously. In recent years, botulinum toxin, utilized widely as a striated muscle relaxant in managing blepharospasm, anal sphincter spasm, and muscle spasm complicating CVAs, and in smoothening facial wrinkles, has been extended to the management of achalasia on the basis that it impairs smooth muscle responsiveness to acetylcholine. Eighty units of Botox (botulinum toxin) are injected directly into the endoscopically (endoscopic ultrasound techniques may facilitate localization) located LES region (20 units into each of 4 quadrants). Symptom relief lasting 6 months on average is experienced in more than 65% of treated patients, and the complication rate is negligible. This therapeutic option is reserved for patients too ill to undergo any surgical procedure and is most effective when the lower esophageal region is hypertonic.
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PMID:Treatment of achalasia with botulinum A toxin. 1189 30

Eosinophilic esophagitis (EE) is an important esophageal disorder with distinct clinicopathologic features, and the condition is associated with a high prevalence of food allergies and atopy. In the past decade, we have improved our ability to recognize the phenotype of EE, but our ability to treat EE effectively remains limited despite several reports of successful treatment using elemental or elimination diets, and systemic and topical corticosteroids. The limitations for developing effective treatment regimens are due to some still unresolved and ambiguous aspects of the pathogenesis of EE. Neither the predisposing factors for developing EE in a subset of patients with atopy, nor the variable responsiveness to control measures for allergens are fully understood. There also remain questions about the precise role of gastroesophageal reflux, and the natural history of the disorder, contingent on which is the optimal treatment of EE. In devising treatment for a patient with EE, all attempts should be made to identify and control food and other allergies. In patients who have no diagnosed allergies or who are unresponsive to allergy treatment, topical steroids are a safe and effective treatment option. Systemic steroids should be reserved for those patients who are refractory to topical steroids. Beyond the initial phase of induction treatment, it is crucial to develop effective and safe maintenance treatment regimens based on ongoing allergen control and mast cell inhibitors. There are limited but encouraging data to support further exploration of the role of leukotriene and interleukin-5 inhibitors as safe, effective, and steroid-sparing treatment options.
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PMID:Treatment of Eosinophilic Esophagitis in Children. 1220 60

Approximately two thirds of pregnant patients develop heartburn. The origin is multifactorial, but the predominant factor is a decrease in LES pressure caused by female sex hormones, especially progesterone. Mechanical factors play a small role. Serious reflux complications during pregnancy are rare; therefore EGD and other diagnostic tests are infrequently needed. Symptomatic GERD during pregnancy should be managed with a step-up algorithm beginning with lifestyle modifications and dietary changes. Antacids or sucralfate are considered the first-line medical therapy. If symptoms persist, H2RAs should be used. Ranitidine is probably preferred because of its documented efficacy and safety profile in pregnancy, even in the first trimester. Proton-pump inhibitors are reserved for the woman with intractable symptoms or complicated reflux disease. Lansoprazole may be the preferred PPI because of its safety profile in animals and case reports of safety in human pregnancies.
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PMID:Gastroesophageal reflux disease during pregnancy. 1263 18

Radiologic techniques can be used for patients in need of long-term enteral nutritional support. In particular, these techniques can provide solutions when endoscopic techniques cannot be performed. Percutaneous radiologic gastrostomy is an alternative to percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy. Percutaneous radiologic transgastric jejunostomy should be reserved for patients with proven gastroesophageal reflux. When both are not possible, percutaneous radiologic jejunostomy is indicated. Percutaneous radiologic gastrostomy and percutaneous radiologic transgastric jejunostomy have a high technical success rate (> or = 91-95%). The success rate of percutaneous radiologic jejunostomy is lower (85-88%). With radiologic techniques, major complications occur in 0.5-13% of cases. The percentage of complications for percutaneous radiologic gastrostomy and percutaneous radiologic transgastric jejunostomy are lower than those for percutaneous radiologic jejunostomy. The less serious, mostly late-onset complications (2.9-13%) are usually easy to treat. Radiologic techniques have a higher initial success rate but more late-onset complications than endoscopic techniques.
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PMID:[Gastrostomy tubes inserted with radiologic techniques]. 1266 53

Non-ulcer dyspepsia is common and is often confused with other diagnoses. It remains a condition identified by exclusion, and continues to be a challenge to manage. Currently, only a limited number of pharmacological options are available. Antacids are no more effective than placebo in treating nonulcer dyspepsia. H2-receptor antagonists appear to be superior to placebo in efficacy, but many of the studies suggesting this finding have had a suboptimal study design. Proton pump inhibitors have been shown to be superior to placebo, although questions remain as to whether the only subgroup that responds is comprised of patients with unrecognized gastroesophageal reflux disease. Studies have found that prokinetic agents are superior to placebo, but currently only a very limited number of agents within this class can be prescribed in the United States. Sparse data support the role of metoclopramide and its side effects limit its use even further. The eradication of Helicobacter pylori has a small but positive therapeutic benefit in non-ulcer dyspepsia, and can be considered in those confirmed to be infected. Sucralfate is unlikely to be effective, and misoprostol is ineffective. Bismuth alone is probably not efficacious. Tricyclic antidepressants may have a therapeutic role, but this is not firmly established and this class of medication should be reserved for resistant cases. Emerging therapies include drugs that relax the gastric fundus, such as buspirone or sumatriptan, and the new prokinetic tegaserod. Psychological therapies may play a role but studies of these therapies are limited. Therapy for non-ulcer dyspepsia remains challenging and is usually empiric; it will remain so until the mechanisms that induce symptoms of dyspepsia are better understood.
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PMID:Update on the role of drug therapy in non-ulcer dyspepsia. 1268 90

Esophageal carcinoma is a highly lethal disease with increasing prevalence and an equally dramatic epidemiologic shift. Its causal association with gastroesophageal reflux disease and adenocarcinoma of the esophagus is well established, and the molecular events underlying this progression from mucosal injury to metaplasia to dysplasia to carcinoma are now becoming clear. Current diagnostic modalities and preoperative staging systems have significant limitations. The extent of surgical resection for esophageal carcinoma remains controversial. Disease confined to the mucosa and submucosa is more common, and endoscopic ablative techniques have been proposed. However, preoperative evaluation of tumor depth and regional nodal metastases remains inadequate in these very early lesions and urges caution before adoption of therapies that may compromise cure. Patients with disease confined to the mucosa or submucosa should undergo resectional therapy aimed at removing the entire esophageal wall, including the periesophageal and perihiatal lymph nodes. For disease penetrating the submucosa, the extent of surgical therapy must be tailored to the objectives of treatment (cure vs palliation) and preoperative stage. Although data from seven prospective, randomized trials are encouraging, no clear survival benefit has been documented for neoadjuvant combined-modality therapy. Surgical resection remains the standard of care and best chance for cure in the treatment of esophageal malignancy, with combined-modality therapy reserved for prohibitive surgery candidates.
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PMID:Surgical management of esophageal malignancy. 1273 40

The second-generation proton pump inhibitor (PPI) esomeprazole is a new chemical entity consisting of an optical isomer of omeprazole, which for many years has been acknowledged as the gold standard therapy in gastric acid-related disorders. Esomeprazole has demonstrated a unique pharmacokinetic profile and enhanced efficacy over omeprazole, with improved inter-patient pharmacokinetic consistency and a similar safety profile. Esomeprazole has been tested as a therapeutic agent in the management of erosive esophagitis, symptomatic gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) and, in combination with appropriate antibiotic therapy, for the eradication of the Helicobacter pylori bacterium and healing of H. pylori-associated duodenal ulcers. In clinical studies, esomeprazole has shown greater efficacy than omeprazole with a comparable low incidence of adverse events. (c) 2001 Prous Science. All rights reserved.
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PMID:Esomeprazole: A significant advance beyond omeprazole in the treatment of acid-related disease. 1273 73

The primary treatment goals in patients with gastroesophageal reflux disease are relief of symptoms, prevention of symptom relapse, healing of erosive esophagitis, and prevention of complications of esophagitis. In patients with reflux esophagitis, treatment is directed at acid suppression through the use of lifestyle modifications (e.g., elevating the head of the bed, modifying the size and composition of meals) and pharmacologic agents (a histamine H2-receptor antagonist [H2RA] taken on demand or a proton pump inhibitor IPPI] taken 30 to 60 minutes before the first meal of the day). The preferred empiric approach is step-up therapy (treat initially with an H2RA for eight weeks; if symptoms do not improve, change to a PPI) or step-down therapy (treat initially with a PPI; then titrate to the lowest effective medication type and dosage). In patients with erosive esophagitis identified on endoscopy, a PPI is the initial treatment of choice. Diagnostic testing should be reserved for patients who exhibit warning signs (i.e., weight loss, dysphagia, gastrointestinal bleeding) and patients who are at risk for complications of esophagitis (i.e., esophageal stricture formation, Barrett's esophagus, adenocarcinoma). Antireflux surgery, including open and laparoscopic versions of Nissen fundoplication, is an alternative treatment in patients who have chronic reflux with recalcitrant symptoms. Newer endoscopic modalities, including the Stretta and endocinch procedures, are less invasive and have fewer complications than antireflux surgery, but response rates are lower.
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PMID:Management of gastroesophageal reflux disease. 1456 83

OBJECTIVE: To discuss clinical, diagnostic and therapeutic aspects of gastroesophageal reflux. METHOD: We accomplished a literature review of the last 30 years, by means of Lilacs and Medline databases. RESULTS: The gastroesophageal reflux is one of the most frequent causes of medical appointments with pediatric gastroenterologists. It represents a benign condition, characterized by regurgitations that can be resolved with general measures. Medical management with prokinetics and antacid agents controls clinical manifestations and prevents complications. Fundoplication is reserved to a minority of cases. COMMENTS: Some aspects of the clinical treatment have to be emphasized. Thickened/Solid diet and erect posture must be always recommended. Cisapride, the most commonly employed prokinetic agent, may prolong ventricular repolarization. Other prokinetic agents should be used in children. Bronchospasm or clinical manifestations of esophagitis indicate the use of antacid drugs.
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PMID:[Gastroesophageal reflux] 1467 26


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