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Query: UMLS:C0024623 (
gastric cancer
)
36,219
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In 11 years experience (67-78) we studied the importance of endoscopy in HDA. Were carried out 8300 esophagogastroduodenal endoscopies of which 2837 were HDA. The main reasons to follow these studies were: 1) Diagnostic of the HDA location; 2) Diagnostic of type of injury; 3) Injury intensity. Referring to the findings 30% were duodenal ulcer; 27% hemorrhagic gastritis; 17% gastric ulcer and 10% were due to VE. From the remaining 10% the most frequent were the
esophagitis
and
gastric cancer
. It is most important to show that aspiring added to alcohol in the most common cause of hemorrhagic gastritis. We have to point out that in 42 endoscopies performed in Intensive Care Service 10 of them were due to non-digestive causes. Through this method of diagnosis the Endoscopist has an important role to play in defining the prognosis and conduct to be followed.
...
PMID:[Value of endoscopy in the diagnosis of upper digestive tract hemorrhage]. 31 70
Dyspepsia may result from over-indulgence in alcohol and food, or from anxiety and emotional problems. It may also indicate a peptic ulcer,
oesophagitis
or less commonly, gallstones or
gastric cancer
. Investigation by endoscopy or barium studies is always indicated when an organic lesion is suspected. Reassurance, tranquillizers and antispasmodics help patients with functional dyspepsia. Antacids given hourly between meals are important in the treatment of all symptomatic peptic ulcers. Cimetidine causes rapid symptomatic relief of duodenal ulcer symptoms, and most ulcers will heal with six weeks' therapy. Gastric ulcer can be treated with carbenoxolone, but this drug is avoided in the elderly and in patients with cardiac failure or hypertension. Anticholinergic drugs are of value in duodenal ulcer, especially for night pain, but they should not be used in patients over the age of 50. Special diets are of no value. For the heartburn of
oesophagitis
, weight reduction and a regime of regular antacid therapy remain the important measures.
...
PMID:The treatment of dyspepsia. 92 13
Under analysis were results of surgical treatment of 145 patients with
gastric cancer
by original author's method of reflux esophago-gastro-intestinal anastomoses. Gastrectomy was performed in 66.9% of patients. Postoperative lethality was 3.4%. In remote terms after operation mild degree of reflux-
esophagitis
developed in 3 out of 83 patients observed after gastrectomy and 1 of 12 patients after proximal resection of the stomach. Five-year survival made up 21.4%.
...
PMID:[Immediate and late results of surgical treatment of gastric cancer]. 165 Sep 90
Rehabilitation needs and problems in 227
gastric cancer
patients. In an investigation on needs of rehabilitation in
gastric cancer
we evaluated postgastrectomy problems in 227 gastrectomized patients. The average weight loss was 5% prior to operation and there was a further weight loss of 16% in the follow-up 18 months after the operation due to the postgastrectomy syndrome. The most frequent complaints of gastrectomized patients were inappetence (32%), reflux
oesophagitis
(25.1%), eructation (54.2%), diarrhea (22%), flatulence (36.5%), dumping syndrome (20.4%). 176 patients (78%) observed an indigestion of certain food since the operation. Postgastrectomy syndromes were more frequent in totally than in partially gastrectomized patients.
...
PMID:[Postgastrectomy findings in the after care of 227 patients with stomach carcinoma]. 195 29
Helicobacter pylori is a gram negative bacteria which has recently been associated to tissular changes of the upper digestive tract, however, the causal role has not yet been determined. Of 150 patients studied, 63 had tissular changes associated to Helicobacter pylori (Hp), 8 had Hp without tissular related changes (of whom 3 suffered bulbar ulcus and 1 gastric ulcus); the rest of the patients had hiatus hernia associated to distal
esophagitis
or pyloric stenosis; and only one patient was found to have normal tissue. A clear associated to distal
esophagitis
or pyloric stenosis; and only one patient was found to have normal tissue. A clear association between Hp and chronic or atrophic gastritis was determined, but no association was found between Hp and
gastric cancer
.
...
PMID:[Histopathologic changes associated with the presence of Helicobacter pylori in antral mucosa]. 213 72
Observation of 157 patients subjected to subtotal resection or gastrectomy for
gastric cancer
were performed. In 37 patients the duodenum was included in the process of digestion after gastrectomy with the help of T-shaped duplication of the small intestine and its partly isolated portion. This method was not followed in the early postoperative period by incompetence of the formed anastomoses, paresis of the displaced intestine; in the more remote period manifestations of the agastral asthemia became less and no reflux-
esophagitis
was observed. The investigation has shown that the relative value of gastrectomies with regard for the diagnosed recurrent carcinoma of the gastric stump must make up not less than 50% of the total amount of radical operations performed for this pathology of the stomach.
...
PMID:[The place of gastrectomy and the possibilities of prevention of post-gastrectomy disorders in the surgical treatment of gastric cancer]. 216 4
The duodenogastric reflux (DGR) is a suspected cause in some esogastric pathologies in adults:
esophagitis
, peptic gastric ulcers, stress ulcers, ulcers secondary to drugs,
gastric cancer
, and gastritis. The toxic substances of the reflux are essentially bile acids, lysolecithin, and trypsin. A number of diagnostic methods have been proposed in the adult. This study suggests a diagnosis technique for DGR in the child. Fasting gastric juice was collected by gastric intubation during 1 h and three substances were measured: phospholipids as markers of biliary reflux, trypsin as a marker of pancreatic reflux, and sialic acid as a marker of the degradation of gastric mucus. The sialic acid enabled us to evaluate some of the toxicity of DGR on the stomach. The study of 49 child subjects permitted us to show the existence, in the normal child, of biliopancreatic markers in the stomach under fasting conditions through a physiological DGR; to define the norms in the child, varying according to three age groups: 0-2 months, 2-12 months, and 1-4 years (the maximum values for an age above 4 years seemed to correspond to those in the adult); and to suggest the existence of a pathological DGR in children with antral gastritis or ulcers.
...
PMID:Duodenogastric reflux in children: measurement of phospholipids and trypsin in gastric content. 218 18
In the study of a group of 178 unselected patients (105 men, 73 women, mean age 44.5 years), from a population at high risk for gastric carcinoma, who presented with chronic dyspepsia, a minimum of 8 gastric and oesophageal biopsy specimens were taken during upper gastro-intestinal endoscopy, and examined histologically and histochemically for the presence of Campylobacter pylori and other pathological lesions. Gastric colonisation by C. pylori was found in 75% of men and 68.4% of women. In 90% of patients with duodenal or gastric ulcer and in 71.6% of patients with non-ulcer and non-cancer dyspepsia there was a moderate or severe degree of bacterial colonisation. Association between C. pylori colonisation and microscopic evidence of type B gastritis, gastric or duodenal ulcer,
gastric cancer
,
oesophagitis
and oesophageal glycogenic acanthosis was found.
...
PMID:The association of Campylobacter pylori with mucosal pathological changes in a population at risk for gastric cancer. 247 Jan 57
A review of data on 548 patients with primary squamous cell carcinoma revealed that 24 (4.4%) had had gastrectomy. Although the interval of the gastrectomy due to peptic ulcer or
gastric cancer
and esophageal cancer was 13.4 +/- 7.9 and 5.8 +/- 4.2 years, respectively, this difference was thought to be due only to the occurrence of each disease. The incidence of the occurrence of the lower esophageal cancer after gastrectomy was 29.2%, not significantly higher than the 22.4% incidence of lower esophageal cancer in overall cases. Histopathological investigation of the 13 resected esophageal cancer tissues from gastrectomized patients revealed a mild
esophagitis
in some cases, with no significant histologic characteristics. Thus esophageal squamous cell carcinoma and previous gastrectomy may be incidentally related.
...
PMID:Occurrence of esophageal carcinoma after gastrectomy. 272 84
This study reports the findings on endoscopy and the final diagnoses of 172 consecutive patients with dyspepsia from a primary health care center. The purpose of our study was to carry out a thorough gastroenterologic investigation of all patients consulting their general practitioner and reporting dyspepsia during 1 full year, from a population within a defined geographic area. The examinations included patient history, physical examination, laboratory tests, esophagogastroduodenoscopy (EGD), and sigmoidoscopy. All the examinations, including the EGDs, were done at the primary care center. A final diagnosis was settled after a minimum of 6 months. Six per cent had
esophagitis
, 13% had peptic ulcer disease, 1% had
gastric cancer
, and 1% had irritable bowel disease. Completely normal endoscopies were seen in 19%. No patient had villous atrophy. Sixty-four per cent had non-ulcer dyspepsia, and 26% had inflammatory bowel syndrome, with great overlapping. It is concluded that open-access endoscopy is a valuable service to primary care, the result of which greatly enhances the diagnostic accuracy in dyspeptic patients entering primary care.
...
PMID:Endoscopic findings and diagnoses in unselected dyspeptic patients at a primary health care center. 292 29
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