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Query: UMLS:C0030193 (pain)
261,466 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The ability to reproduce chest pain and to identify the esophagus as the source of this pain are the major reasons why provocation testing has become standard in the evaluation of patients with noncardiac chest pain. Recent studies that challenge the validity of performing provocation tests have polarized experts into two camps: those who would abandon such testing because of its low sensitivity and low specificity, and those who would use testing judiciously because of moderate increases in diagnostic yield. Use of 24-hour pH and pressure testing has shown a high number of chest pain events associated with acid reflux in patients with positive cholinergic stimulation tests and esophageal dysmotility, as well as pain with esophageal dysmotility in patients with positive acid infusion tests. Mechanisms of esophageal chest pain are not known. All provocation agents can decrease coronary flow reserve (i.e., induce microvascular angina), thus raising the question of a cardiac source of pain even in patients with positive presumed esophageal provocation. Acid infusion, cholinergic stimulation, and balloon distention are discussed in light of 24-hour pH and pressure monitoring. Esophageal distention and the role of acid in inducing chest pain are emphasized. The role of stress, the use of defined stressors to induce chest pain, and altered pain perception as a final common pathway for chest pain are examined.
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PMID:Provocation testing in noncardiac chest pain. 159 67

Oesophageal and cardiac chest pain are often difficult to distinguish on clinical grounds. The clinical course of 32 patients with recurrent chest pain due to oesophageal dysmotility has recently been assessed by questionnaire 9 years after diagnosis. Twenty-six of the 27 who replied continued to have pain, but despite this there was a significant reduction in the number of hospital admissions associated with chest pain. Repeat oesophageal manometry in nine showed that the disturbance in motility persisted. Three had died, one of them from a myocardial infarction; two patients could not be traced.
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PMID:A long-term clinical review of patients with oesophageal pain. 180 33

Esophageal motility disorders are now known to be a heterogeneous group of conditions that commonly cause dysphagia and chest pain. Motor dysphagia is usually provoked by solids and liquids (in contrast to mechanical dysphagia, which is usually provoked by solids only). Chest pain with these disorders is nonspecific and can mimic angina pectoris. In many patients with diffuse esophageal spasm or nutcracker esophagus, pain appears to be caused by abnormal sensory function rather than contraction abnormalities. Barium esophagography and esophageal manometry are complementary studies in the evaluation of motility disorders.
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PMID:Diagnosis of esophageal motility disorders. 239 4

The role of gastroesophageal reflux and esophageal motility abnormalities in patients with angina-type chest pain and normal coronary angiogram is not clear. The aim of this study was: a) to assess the importance of these two disorders in the same patients, b) to study the diagnostic usefulness of provocation tests, c) to determine final outcome in these patients. Seventeen patients with angina-type chest pain and normal coronary angiograms were studied to determine the diagnostic value of esophageal manometry, postprandial esophageal pH monitoring, provocation tests (methylergometrine stimulation, acid perfusion test) and endoscopy. Baseline esophageal motility was abnormal in 10 patients. Esophageal motility disorders were nonspecific in seven patients. Eight patients had reflux. The mean lower esophageal sphincter pressure was decreased in these patients as compared with normals, and endoscopy showed a high Z line, and/or a large opening of the cardia in 7 of them. Neither conventional manometry nor postprandial esophageal pH monitoring allowed to consider the esophagus as responsible for chest pain. The methylergometrine test was positive in 4 patients (simultaneous occurrence of familiar pain and esophageal dysmotility). Baseline manometric studies did not allow to forecast the response to methylergometrine injection. The acid perfusion test was negative (no symptoms were reproduced) in all patients. After esophageal evaluation, 16 patients were followed for a mean of 26 +/- 9 months. No cardiac disorders appeared, but all patients continued to have pain, and 7 were incapable of working.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[pHmetry and manometry of the esophagus in patients with pain of the angina type and a normal angiography]. 336 13

Fibromyalgia is a common condition characterized by diffuse musculoskeletal pain and fatigue. The syndrome is defined by the presence of musculoskeletal tender points on physical examination. Additionally, persons with this syndrome have a high incidence of headaches, ocular and vestibular complaints, paresthesias, esophageal dysmotility, "allergic" symptoms, irritable bowl syndrome, genitourinary symptoms and affective disorders. Recent research has revealed a number of objective biochemical, hormonal and neurotransmitter abnormalities associated with fibromyalgia, making it a clearly identifiable condition. These abnormalities may clarify our understanding of the pathogenesis and treatment of fibromyalgia.
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PMID:Fibromyalgia: more than just a musculoskeletal disease. 854 63

Previous studies have demonstrated lowered sensory thresholds to esophageal balloon distension in patients with chest pain of undetermined etiology. Whether this finding is specific to patients with chest pain or is simply related to an underlying esophageal motility disorder is unclear. In the present study, distension-induced pain-sensation scores and the effect of repeated balloon distension were compared in patients with chest pain, dysphagia secondary to esophageal dysmotility, and healthy controls. All subjects underwent standard esophageal manometry followed by mid-esophageal balloon distension. Volumes 2.5, 5, 7.5, and 10 ml (each volume repeated three times) were applied in random order in a single-blind fashion, and the pain-sensation score was recorded after each distension. Pain-sensation scores varied directly with balloon volume. Mean pain scores were significantly higher (P < 0.001) in the chest pain group than in either the controls or dysphagia group. There was no significant difference between controls and the dysphagia group, and the motor response to distension was no different between groups. In the controls and dysphagia groups, pain-sensation score was not significantly different between the first, second, or third distension at a given volume. However, in the chest pain group, pain-sensation scores increased significantly with the second (P = 0.004) or third (P = 0.002) distension using the same balloon volume. These studies suggest that abnormal esophageal nociception in patients with chest pain of undetermined etiology is not simply related to underlying esophageal motor dysfunction. In addition, chest pain patients display a conditioning phenomenon, further supporting the presence of a visceral sensory abnormality.
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PMID:Increasing pain sensation to repeated esophageal balloon distension in patients with chest pain of undetermined etiology. 778 55

Angina pectoris is a pain syndrome caused by coronary arteriosclerosis but also by a number of other disorders, including microvascular angina, gastroesophageal reflux (GER), and esophageal dysmotility. The relationship between abnormal physiology and pain in these conditions is complex. Simultaneous ambulatory monitoring of esophageal pH and motility has demonstrated that patients may have identical episodes of chest pain with acid reflux, dysmotility, both types of events, or neither. Patients may have anginal chest pain with inflation of an esophageal balloon, and patients with microvascular angina may have pain with catheter manipulation in the right atrium. Recent evidence suggests that disorders of visceral pain perception may play a role in both chest pain of esophageal origin and microvascular angina. The physiology of visceral pain is reviewed, including concepts of convergence of somatic and visceral afferent input, descending modulation of pain perception, and sensitization of visceral pain afferents. An approach to evaluation and treatment of chest pain in patients with angiographically normal coronary arteries is outlined.
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PMID:Southwestern Internal Medicine Conference: the syndrome of angina pectoris: role of visceral pain perception. 816 Jul 26

Standard Holter electrocardiographic (ECG) monitoring was combined with ambulatory esophageal manometry and pH-metry in 25 patients with atypical chest pain in order to determine whether an association could be found between spontaneous pain episodes and ischemic ECG changes or esophageal dysfunction. Results of ambulatory testing were compared to those obtained with standard esophageal manometry and provocative testing. Twenty-two of the 25 patients experienced a total of 88 pain episodes during ambulatory testing. Although 15 of the 22 patients (68%) experiencing pain during testing had at least one pain episode that correlated temporally with gastroesophageal reflux, esophageal dysmotility or ischemic ECG changes, 65% of all pain episodes were unrelated to abnormal esophageal events or ECG changes. Seventeen percent of pain episodes were associated with gastroesophageal reflux, 15% with esophageal dysmotility, and 2% with a combined acid reflux and esophageal dysmotility event. Only one pain episode was associated with ischemic ECG changes. Twelve of the 15 patients with chest pain episodes associated with reflux or esophageal dysmotility had other identical pain episodes in which there was no correlation. Reproduction of a patient's pain during standard manometry with provocative testing did not predict a strong correlation between the patient's spontaneous pain episodes and esophageal dysfunction during ambulatory recordings. In summary, patients with atypical chest pain have relatively few spontaneous pain episodes that correlate with gastroesophageal reflux, esophageal dysmotility, or ischemic ECG changes. It appears that different stimuli can trigger identical episodes of chest pain, which suggests that many of these patients may have dysfunction of their visceral pain sensory mechanisms.
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PMID:Ambulatory esophageal manometry, pH-metry, and Holter ECG monitoring in patients with atypical chest pain. 848 76

Severe nonexertional (resting) chest pain may be due to myocardial ischemia, esophageal dysfunction, psychiatric disorder, or any combination thereof and frequently poses a difficult diagnostic challenge. Our aim was to investigate causes of chest pain in patients with coronary artery disease. Forty-five patients with angiographically proven obstructive coronary lesions and recurrent chest pain at rest were studied; 18 had refractory pain despite cardiac therapy (problem group), and 27 had documented myocardial ischemia (control group). Esophageal manometry, edrophonium provocation, 24-hr pH studies, and psychiatric interview were performed in all patients. The clinical evolution and the outcome of specific treatment during follow-up was used to establish the etiology of chest pain. Esophageal dysfunction was identified in all problem patients and in 52% of controls, and the esophagus was incriminated as the source of pain in 8 (44%) and 5 (18.5%), respectively. After a mean follow-up of 49 months (range 24-76 months), the cause of chest pain in the problem group was identified as panic disorder in 9 patients (50%), gastroesophageal reflux in 6 (33%), esophageal dysmotility in 2 (11%), and gallstone disease in 1 (6%). Of the control patients, 18 (67%) had ischemic pain alone, while 9 had concurrent causes: panic disorder in 5 (19%) and esophageal dysfunction in 4 (15%). Esophageal dysfunction and psychiatric disturbances are common in patients with coronary artery disease presenting with resting chest pain, and may contribute to patients' symptoms.
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PMID:Chest pain at rest in patients with coronary artery disease. Myocardial ischemia, esophageal dysfunction, or panic disorder? 924 27

Gastroesophageal reflux disease is believed to be uncommon in the East. This study aimed to determine if such a condition was a significant cause of noncardiac chest pain in Singapore. Eighty consecutive patients with recurrent chest pain, who had cardiac and other obvious causes excluded, underwent esophagogastroduodenoscopy, standard manometry, acid perfusion test, and prolonged ambulatory pH and pressure monitoring. Endoscopic esophagitis, positive acid perfusion tests, pathologic reflux, and positive chest pain-reflux correlation were detected in 7/80 (8.8%), 11/70 (15.7%), 14/61 (23.0%), and 12/25 (48.0%) patients, respectively. Among those with pathologic reflux, endoscopic esophagitis was present in only two (14.3%). Overall, 32 (40%) patients had gastroesophageal reflux disease. Esophageal motility disorder, alone or in association with gastroesophageal reflux disease, was demonstrated in only five (6.3%) patients. Our results confirmed western reports that gastroesophageal reflux disease was a common cause of noncardiac chest pain, whereas motility disorder was an infrequent cause of such pain.
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PMID:Gastroesophageal reflux disease is a common cause of noncardiac chest pain in a country with a low prevalence of reflux esophagitis. 975 64


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