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Query: UMLS:C0024523 (malabsorption)
7,319 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Gastrointestinal bloating is a common complaint met within the general practitioner's office. The most important cause of this symptom is an increase in the volume of gas in the gastrointestinal tract. Differential diagnoses include aerophagia, ingestion of gas-producing foods, gastric hypersecretion, bacterial overgrowth in the small intestine, disordered gastrointestinal transit, malabsorption or maldigestion of carbohydrates. In addition, nonulcer dyspepsia and the irritable bowel syndrome must be excluded. The diagnosis is based on a history of eructation, heart burn, flatulence and diarrhea, dietary habits, physical examination, laboratory analysis and apparative diagnostic measures. Therapy depends on the underlying cause of the disease.
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PMID:[Meteorism]. 191 70

Pathologic childhood aerophagia is a rarely recognized, often poorly treated entity that has remained almost undescribed in either the surgical or pediatric literature. In only 1 of 9 children the condition was recognized at presentation. The initial diagnosis of the others was Hirschsprung's disease (2), malabsorption syndrome (3), gastric outlet syndrome (1), constipation (1), and esophagitis (1). Five were hospitalized and two underwent surgical procedures. History disclosed a remarkably constant triad: previous normal stooling pattern, visible and often audible air swallowing and excessive flatus. Physical examination often demonstrated a markedly or intermittently distended and tympanitic abdomen. Abdominal musculature was thinned in children with chronic aerophagia. Roentgenographic evaluation showed massively distended loops of intestine throughout without associated air-fluid levels. There was marked compression of the diaphragm with limited excursion in some. Laboratory and malabsorption testing was normal. Treatment is limited to recognition of the problem, nasogastric decompression in severe cases and psychologic counseling when symptoms persist in the older child. The recognition of this condition may lead to a better understanding of its pathophysiology and will reduce the number of unnecessary admissions or surgical procedures.
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PMID:Pathologic childhood aerophagia: a recognizable clinical entity. 725 31

Aerophagia is a functional gastrointestinal disorder characterized by repetitive air swallowing, abdominal distension, belching and flatulence. Pathologic aerophagia is a condition caused by the swallowing of excessive volumes of air with associated various gastrointestinal symptoms, such as burping, abdominal cramps, flatulence and a reduced appetite. It is a clinical entity that can simulate pediatric gastrointestinal motility disorders, such as gastroparesis, megacolon and intestinal pseudo-obstruction, and presents more frequently in children with mental retardation. Early recognition and diagnosis of functional aerophagia or pathologic aerophagia is required to avoid unnecessary, expensive diagnostic investigations or serious clinical complications. Functional aerophagia is frequent in the adult population, but rarely discussed in the pediatric literature. We present two pediatric clinical cases with a history of functional constipation in whom gaseous abdominal distension was the most important symptom. Mechanical intestinal obstruction, chronic intestinal pseudo-obstruction, malabsorption and congenital aganglionic megacolon were ruled out. Extensive gaseous abdominal distension was due to aerophagia, and treatment consisted of parents' reassurance and psychological counseling.
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PMID:Functional aerophagia in children: a frequent, atypical disorder. 2484 94