Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0026827 (
hypotonia
)
5,860
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In the surgical treatment of gastric ulcer (G,U,), the same techniques have been employed as have been used in
duodenal ulcer
(D.U.). This correspondence also holds true with superselective vagotomy and proximal gastric vagotomy (P.G.V.). The technique was primarily indicated in the treatment of D.U. and had very exciting preliminary results, above all owing to its reduced morbidity both immediately and late after surgery, and to its almost null mortality. With a view to analyzing the results of the use of P.G.V. in the treatment of gastric ulcer, thirteen patients were operated upon who were bearers of G.U. not associated with D.U. nor prepyloric ulcer. There were no operating accidents or immediate post-operative complications, nor was there any mortality. In the post-operative period following lasting an average of 17.7 months, we observed the clinical manifestation of the ulcer and symptoms accompaning the operation in addition to performing endoscopy on all of the patients. Eight patients were absolutely asymptomatic after surgery; one had slight dysphagia that diminished about 3 months after P.G.V. Three patients had recurrence of the symptoms of ulcer and one complained of intense epigastric fullness, vomting, weight loss, and a crisis of diarrhea. Radiologic and endoscopic examinations showed that this last patient had
hypotonia
and marked gastric stasis that were corrected surgically by means of antrectomy and the reconstitution of GI tract by the BI technique, with good results. In three patients endoscopy showed postoperative recurrence of the G.U., one of whom is assymptomatic with the clinical treatment; the other two were submitted to antrectomy with BI anastomosis in one and a 2/3 gastrectomy with BI reconstruction in the other. The cure of the lesion in 23% of the cases in the post-operative follow-up lasting an average of 17.7 months permits us henceforward to contra-indicate the P.G.V. used per se for the treatment of G.U.
...
PMID:[Critical analysis of the treatment of gastric ulcer by proximal gastric vagotomy]. 666 Oct 91
The prevalence of associated reflex esophagitis and the effects of surgery for ulcer on coexistent esophagitis were assessed in 687 patients operated on for duodenal or pyloric ulcer. Eighty-one patients (12%) had a preoperative endoscopic diagnosis of reflux esophagitis. The association resulted to be more frequent in patients with pyloric or bulbar stenosis than in patients without stenosis (20% vs 5%, p = 0.000001). Billroth II gastric resection, performed in most cases, caused the healing or the improvement of esophagitis in 95% of cases as demonstrated at endoscopy 6 months after surgery, particularly in 98% of patients with pyloric or bulbar stenosis and in 80% of patients without stenosis (p = 0.05). Therefore, gastric resection, eliminating the main pathogenetic factors of reflux esophagitis associated with pyloric or bulbar stenosis (gastric acid hypersecretion, impaired gastric emptying), assures the healing of esophagitis in most cases. However, anomalies in Lower Esophageal Sphincter function might play an important role in the pathogenesis of reflux esophagitis in
duodenal ulcer
patients without stenosis. In these patients, on the basis of manometric and pH monitoring data, it may be useful to associate an anti-reflux procedure or a duodenal diversion with a gastric resection in presence of Lower Esophageal Sphincter
hypotonia
.
...
PMID:Surgical management of reflux esophagitis associated with duodenal ulcer. 754 30