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Query: UMLS:C0030193 (pain)
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In the present conditions of development of the medical sciences the wide and varied use of pre- and postoperative antibiotherapy, to which is added the complex therapy carried out in the intensive-care unit, have changed the course of the dramatic postoperative peritonitis that at present do not develop any more according to the classical symptomatology. The key to success in these cases is the discovery as rapidly as possible of the moment when peritoneal infection has started to develop in view of applying the only correct treatment--reintervention. The present study makes an analysis of 32 cases and stresses the atypical evolution of postoperative peritonitis: contracture, pain, high fever and hyperleukocytosis cannot be considered any more as constant and certain signs. Meteorism and gastric stasis that is prolonged or that developes after 4-8 days following surgery are the most frequently encountered of the signs and are considered to be the most important. Exploratory laparotomy is the most correct attitude in dubious cases.
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PMID:[Atypical postoperative peritonitis]. 12 27

Seventy patients with peptic ulcers (55 duodenal and 15 gastric) were treated by truncal vagotomy and doulbe pyloroplasty during the past four years. Clinical and experimental data as presented lead us to believe that transecting the pylorus twice produces an incontinent pyloric sphincter and a larger gastric outlet than is found in other methods of pyloroplasty. This decreases gastric stasis and has led to a lower ulcer recurrence rate (1.5%). In addition the untoward postoperative sequelae are minimal. The 70 patients treated (for the most pare consecutive cases) exhibited the usual complications of peptic ulcer disease. Thirty-three had intractable pain, 23 bleeding (15 massive), 13 obstruction, and one acute perforation. There were no operative or postoperative deaths and the only serious postoperative complication was unrelated to the double pyloroplasty. During the followup period four patients have died of unrelated diseases. Of the remaining 66 patients one developed a probable recurrent peptic ulcer which has responded to medical management. Four patients have intermittent dumping, three have mild diarrhea and one has failed to gain weight, Constipation and weight gain are more common complaints. It would appear that vagotomy with double pyloroplasty is a safe and effective operation for peptic ulcers and that further clinical trials are warranted.
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PMID:Vagotomy and double pyloroplasty for peptic ulcer. 111 66

In a recent editorial, Kapur described perioperative nausea and vomiting as "the big 'little problem' following ambulatory surgery."257 Although the actual morbidity associated with nausea is relatively low in health outpatients, it should not be considered an unavoidable part of the perioperative experience. The availability of an emesis basin for every patient in the postanesthesia recovery unit is a reflection of the limited success with the available therapeutic techniques.257 There had been little change in the incidence of postoperative emesis since the introduction of halothane into clinical practice in 1956. However, newer anesthetic drugs (e.g. propofol) appear to have contributed to a recent decline in the incidence of emesis. Factors associated with an increased risk of postoperative emesis include age, gender (menses), obesity, previous history of motion sickness or postoperative vomiting, anxiety, gastroparesis, and type and duration of the surgical procedure (e.g., laparoscopy, strabismus, middle ear procedures). Anesthesiologists have little, if any, control over these surgical factors. However, they do have control over many other factors that influence postoperative emesis (e.g., preanesthetic medication, anesthetic drugs and techniques, and postoperative pain management). Although routine antiemetic prophylaxis is clearly unjustified, patients at high risk for postoperative emesis should receive special considerations with respect to the prophylactic use of antiemetic drugs. Minimally effective doses of antiemetic drugs can be administered to reduce the incidence of sedation and other deleterious side effects. Potent nonopioid analgesics (e.g., ketorolac) can be used to control pain while avoiding some of the opioid-related side effects. Gentle handling in the immediate postoperative period is also essential. If emesis does occur, aggressive intravenous hydration and pain management are important components of the therapeutic regimen, along with antiemetic drugs. If one antiemetic does not appear to be effective, another drug with a different site of action should be considered. With the availability of new antiserotonin drugs, the incidence of recurrent (intractable) emesis could be further decreased. Research into the mechanisms of this common postoperative complication may help in improving the management of emetic sequelae in the future. As suggested in a recent editorial, improvement in antiemetic therapy could have a major impact for surgical patients, particularly after ambulatory surgery. Patients as well as those involved in their postoperative care look forward to a time when the routine offering of an emesis basin after surgery becomes a historical practice.
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PMID:Postoperative nausea and vomiting. Its etiology, treatment, and prevention. 843 45

Sensory and pressure responses to gastric distension were evaluated in 24 consecutive patients suffering from chronic idiopathic dyspepsia and 20 healthy subjects. A latex balloon was placed in the proximal stomach and inflated by increments of 100 ml of air up to a maximal volume of 800 ml. Symptom response and intragastric pressure-volume curve were recorded during the gradual balloon distension. Thirteen of the 24 patients experienced pain at a distension volume less than or equal to 400 ml of air, but only one of the 20 controls (P less than 0.001). Intragastric pressure-volume curves were similar in patients and controls, and in patients with and without abnormal pain threshold, suggesting that a compliance defect was not the cause of the sensory anomaly. Gastric emptying of solids and liquids was measured in 20 of the 24 patients using a dual isotopic technique; psychological status was also evaluated in 18 patients using the Mini-Mult test. The frequency of the sensory anomaly was not different in patients with (7/14) or without (4/6) gastric stasis, but was lower in patients with (5/13) than in those without psychological disturbances (5/5, P less than 0.01). Thus, a primary visceral sensory anomaly, either alone or in conjunction with motility disturbances, can play an important role in chronic idiopathic dyspepsia and must be taken in account for further therapeutic research.
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PMID:Abnormal perception of visceral pain in response to gastric distension in chronic idiopathic dyspepsia. The irritable stomach syndrome. 189 8

Gastric motor dysfunction and concomitant gastric stasis have been implicated in the pathogenesis of nonulcer dyspepsia, but a cause-and-effect relationship is not established. Essential dyspepsia refers to a subgroup of nonulcer dyspepsia patients who have no evidence of irritable bowel syndrome, gastroesophageal reflux, or pancreaticobiliary disease. In 32 patients with essential dyspepsia, and 32 randomly selected dyspepsia-free community controls of similar age and sex, we measured gastric emptying of solids using Tc99m-Sulphur Colloid in a fried egg sandwich. Subjects with neuromuscular or other diseases that may alter gastric emptying were excluded. Symptoms were assessed by a standard questionnaire. Data processing was carried out "blinded" to the subjects' clinical status. Female patients took significantly longer to empty half the initial stomach activity (mean 90 min) than female controls (mean, 73 min; p = 0.02). The rate of emptying at 25 min was also significantly less in female patients than in controls. Female and male controls, and male patients, had similar emptying times. Delayed emptying was not associated with the occurrence of postprandial pain, belching, or nausea; there was a trend for the half-time rate of emptying to be greater in patients with abdominal distention. While gastric emptying of solids is slightly delayed in females with essential dyspepsia as a group, this may not explain their symptoms.
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PMID:Lack of association between gastric emptying of solids and symptoms in nonulcer dyspepsia. 258 62

Symptoms of severe nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, and frequent bezoars, as well as objective gastric retention, can occur following Roux-Y biliary diversion for alkaline reflux gastritis. Medical therapy and prokinetic drugs have proven ineffective. This review evaluates 37 patients who underwent further gastric resection from 1979 to 1987 to improve gastric emptying and resolve symptoms. Fifteen patients underwent perioperative radionuclide solid-food gastric emptying studies. Seventy-three per cent (27 of 37 patients) of the patients who underwent further gastric resection (70% to 95%) had a satisfactory postoperative response. Twenty patients were graded Visick 1 or 2 and 7 Visick-3 patients, although much improved, still had some symptoms of gastroparesis. Twenty-seven per cent (10 of 37 patients) failed to improve and underwent completion total gastrectomy. Overall, 70% of this group had almost complete resolution of their symptoms. Three of 10 patients were considered "failures" due to postprandial pain in 1 and early vasomotor dumping in 2. Of the 10 patients who failed initial revisional surgery, 7 underwent a 70% to 80% subtotal gastric resection (STG) and 3 patients underwent 85% to 95% extensive resection (EXT.G.). Of the 15 patients who underwent perioperative radionuclide evaluation, a mean two-hour gastric retention of 61.4% +/- 4% (SEM) decreased to 25% +/- 4% following further gastric resection. Eight patients were in the STG group and seven patients were in the EXT.G group. Following STG, mean two-hour gastric retention of 58.2% +/- 3.5% decreased to 38% +/- 3% (p less than 0.05). In seven patients who underwent EXT.G, mean two-hour retention of 65% +/- 4% decreased to 10% +/- 2.5% (p less than 0.005). EXT.G resulted in normal gastric emptying and few late failures. In post-Roux-Y patients with symptoms of gastroparesis and documented gastric retention, EXT.G normalizes gastric emptying and restores a better quality of life. Total gastrectomy should be reserved for those patients who are failed by more extensive resection.
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PMID:The surgical treatment of chronic gastric atony following Roux-Y diversion for alkaline reflux gastritis. 273 Jan 85

Using a gastric barostat we have studied interdigestive variations in gastric tone and its response to gastric distention in 17 healthy volunteers and 5 patients with postsurgical gastroparesis. The barostat measures tone by monitoring the volume of air within a flaccid intragastric bag, maintained at a constant, preselected pressure level by an electronic feedback mechanism. In healthy individuals, inter-digestive variations in gastric tone were phase-locked in advance of duodenal interdigestive motor activity and consisted of three sequential periods; a quiescence period, an intermediate period, and a period of activity. In contrast to controls, gastroparetic patients presented significantly larger intragastric volume at low intragastric pressure (6 mmHg). Gastric distention (14 mmHg) resulted in significantly reduced extension ratio and phasic motor response in the gastric remnant. Furthermore, distention elicited a symptomatic response that resembled their postcibal syndrome (epigastric fullness, pain, nausea). These data suggest that postsurgical gastroparesis is associated with impaired tone of the residual gastric pouch.
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PMID:Gastric tone measured by an electronic barostat in health and postsurgical gastroparesis. 355 99

The results of 48 Roux-en-Y (RY) diversion procedures are reported: 41 were performed as secondary procedures and 7 as part of a primary operation for peptic ulcer. There was no operative mortality, but four patients developed temporary fistulae in the postoperative period and three patients required reoperation. Good clinical results were found when RY diversion was performed as a primary procedure or when the indication for operation was peptic ulceration. The overall results, however, were poor: 24 patients (50 per cent) felt that they had not benefited and 32 patients (67 per cent) remained in Visick grades III or IV. The main cause of failure was gastric stasis, especially of solid food. Gastric emptying studies were carried out after RY diversion in 22 patients, most of whom had symptoms of stasis. Emptying of liquids was found to be normal in most patients, but emptying of solids was delayed, the median t 1/2 for solids being 160 (75-370) min compared with 67 (50-85) min in DU patients. Bilious vomiting improved significantly after RY diversion, but 18 patients (38 per cent) complained of vomiting food and 32 patients (67 per cent) experienced postprandial distress or pain. Loss of the antral mill, vagotomy of the gastric remnant and, perhaps, resistance to gastric emptying by the Roux loop itself may together explain the delay in gastric emptying of solids after RY diversion.
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PMID:Gastric emptying and clinical outcome after Roux-en-Y diversion. 366 21

During a 2 year period, 83 patients with gastric motility problems were evaluated using radionuclide imaging. The patients presented with epigastric distress, postprandial fullness, pain, nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea; signs and symptoms suggestive of either gastroparesis or gastric outlet obstruction. Upper gastrointestinal series or endoscopy, or both, demonstrated no mechanical obstruction. After oral administration of a 300 g meal labeled with 600 muCi of technetium-99m sulfur colloid, a gastric emptying study consisting of serial images and data acquisition was performed. Of the patients studied, 52 had had peptic ulcer surgery, 17 were suspected of having gastroesophageal reflux, 8 were diabetic and suspected of having visceral enteropathy, and 6 had a history of irritable bowel syndrome. The normal mean gastric half emptying time was 77 +/- 16 minutes. Of the patients who had had gastric surgery, 90.4 percent had abnormal emptying: 69.2 percent had delayed gastric emptying and 21.2 percent had rapid gastric emptying time; 9.6 percent had normal emptying time. Of the gastroesophageal reflux group, all but two had normal gastric emptying time; 65 percent demonstrated gastroesophageal reflux within 15 minutes. Two of the patients with irritable bowel syndrome had prolonged emptying; the rest had normal emptying. All diabetic patients with gastroparesis had prolonged gastric emptying time, and all responded favorably to metoclopramide. Of the patients who previously had peptic ulcer surgery and had prolonged emptying time, 72 percent also responded favorably to metoclopramide. We conclude that radionuclide gastric imaging is a useful diagnostic test for the measurement of gastric emptying in patients with a variety of gastrointestinal motility disorders and may be helpful in assessing medical therapy and selecting those who may be candidates for surgery.
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PMID:Assessment of gastric motility using meal labeled with technetium-99m sulfur colloid. 665 Jul 70

Autonomic diabetic neuropathy of the alimentary canal takes several basic forms: a) oesophagopathy , b) gastroparesis, c) enteropathy, d) bile duct disorders. In many cases three are no subjective symptoms. In other the onset of the clinical condition may take acute and dangerous forms as in gastropathy. In still other cases e.g. enteropathy, the neuropathy may develop in bizarre and unexpected ways which are highly damaging to the patient's quality of life though in most cases they are not fatal. Bile disorders involving minimal motility after stimulus, as in denervation and reduced sensitivity to pain are particularly significant. Diabetics are more likely to suffer from calculosis (59.6% of cases), with septic complications (20% in diabetics compared to 7.8% in non-diabetics) or cholestasis (20% in diabetics v. 15.8% in non-diabetics). These figures indicate that all diabetics and especially the elderly should be subjected to careful examination to identify any bile disorders.
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PMID:[Diabetic neuropathy. II. Autonomic neuropathy. The gastrointestinal system]. 672 33


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