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Query: UMLS:C0038358 (gastric ulcer)
5,179 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A retrospective study examined the clinical course of 32 patients with hiatal hernia in whom hemorrhage of the upper gastrointestinal tract was a prominent symptom. Hemorrhagic esophagitis was the most common source of bleeding. Duodenal ulcer, gastritis, and gastric ulcer of the herniated stomach were other less frequent causes of hemorrhage in these patients. Hemorrhage from esophagitis is usually mild and chronically recurrent. Surgical correction of the hiatal hernia and reflux is adequate treatment for the patient with hemorrhage from esophagitis or gastritis of the herniated stomach. Hemorrhage from duodenal ulcer as well as gastric ulcer requires a procedure directed at these lesions. Because of the association of upper gastrointestinal bleeding in hiatal hernia with lesions other than esophagitis, a vigorous diagnostic approach with endoscopy is essential.
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PMID:Diagnosis and treatment of hemorrhage in patients with hiatal hernia. 30 Jan 32

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.
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PMID:[Value of endoscopy in the diagnosis of upper digestive tract hemorrhage]. 31 70

Cimetidine is a specific competitive histamine H2-receptor antagonist which effectively inhibits gastric acid secretion and is advocated for the treatment of chronic peptic ulceration, haemorrhage from erosive gastritis, and the control of gastric hypersecretion and peptic ulceration in the Zollinger-Ellison syndrome. Placebo-controlled trials in outpatients have demonstrated its efficacy in promoting the healing of endoscopically diagnosed duodenal ulceration, during a period of 4 to 6 weeks, but its role in the treatment of gastric ulcer is less clear. Preliminary evidence suggests that maintenance therapy with cimetidine reduces the rate of recurrence of duodenal ulcer, but further studies are required to clarify its role in this situation and in the treatment of oesophagitis and acute gastrointestinal haemorrhage. Cimetidine controls the peptic ulceration of Zollinger-Ellison syndrome in most patients when given continuously for up to 2 years. Side-effects have generally been trivial and have very seldom necessitated withdrawal of therapy except in the rare occurrence of gynaecomastia. The haematological abnormalities particularly agranulocytosis, which lead to the withdrawal from clinical use of metiamide, have not been reported with cimetidine, except for 1 case of transient neutropenia. The safety of long-term cimetidine administration has yet to be determined.
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PMID:Cimetidine: a review of its pharmacological properties and therapeutic efficacy in peptic ulcer disease. 34 31

In 95 consecutive cases of cavaderic renal transplantation followed up for 1 to 83 months (mean 23.1 months) 17 complications developed in the upper gastrointestinal tract of 15 patients; these included duodenal ulcer in 12 and gastric ulcer, esophagitis, hemorrhagic gastritis, small-bowel obstruction and small-bowel perforation in 1 each. The occurrence of a complication was not related to the patient's age, sex, blood group or use of cigarettes or alcohol, the duration of hemodialysis before transplantation, the tissue match or the number of infusions of immunosuppressive medication. One patient died of the complication. The peptic ulcers that developed after transplantation were successfully managed conservatively in 69% of cases. Since surgical treatment in patients whose immune response has been suppressed is associated with an increased frequency of complications such as disruption of suture lines, it is preferable to reserve it for those in whom complications develop that are unresponsive to conservative measures.
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PMID:Gastrointestinal complications of renal transplantation. 1. The upper gastrointestinal tract. 36 48

Most physicians recognize that the ingestion of lye is associated with severe esophageal damage. It is much less widely known that gastric injury is the predominant finding when acid is ingested. We are reporting on five patients who had severe gastric damage after ingestion of diluted sulfuric acid (three cases), capsules of potassium hydroxide, and Clinitest tablets (one case each). Fiberoptic endoscopy was used to localize the extent and severity of injury and to follow the evolution of the damage. The extent and location of injury varied with the amount and type of agent ingested. Acid ingestion resulted in severe gastritis, which eventually led to antral stenosis and gastric outlet obstruction requiring operative intervention in two cases. Potassium hydroxide capsules produced diffuse esophagitis, gastritis, and a non-healing large gastric ulcer. Clinitest tablets produced distal esophagitis and stricture and antral damage leading to gastric outlet obstruction which required operative intervention. These cases demonstrate the natural history of corrosive injury to the stomach and the value of fiberoptic endoscopy in the management of this problem.
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PMID:Corrosive injury to the stomach: the natural history and role of fiberoptic endoscopy. 45 76

Fiberoptic endoscopy of the upper gastrointestinal tract was performed on 53 patients without incident, ranging in age between two months and 18 years, of whom 35 were out patients at the time of examination. Of 27 patients with recurrent abdominal pain and normal upper gastrointestinal series, eight had abnormal findings at endoscopy: a duodenal ulcer in four, a gastric ulcer in two and duodenitis in two. Of 18 patients with hematemesis and/or melena, esophageal varices were demonstrated both by endoscopy and x-ray in two, gastric ulcer by endoscopy in three and x-ray in one, duodenal ulcer by endoscopy in three and by x-ray in two, esophagitis by endoscopy only in one patient, erosive gastritis by endoscopy in five and by x-ray in two and duodenitis by endoscopy in three and by x-ray in two. Of the remaining eight patients with abnormal x-rays findings and other symptomatology, endoscopy demonstrated foreign bodies in two (coins, esophagus and stomach), duodenitis in two, a gastric ulcer in one, a duodenal ulcer in one and normal examination in two. The data indicate that fiberoptic endoscopy significantly improves diagnostic accuracy in the evaluation of disorders of the upper gastrointestinal tract in children and is a safe and effective procedure in ambulatory pediatric patients.
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PMID:Fiberoptic endoscopy of the gastrointestinal tract in infants and children. I. Upper endoscopy in 53 children. 60 92

Clinical indications, operative findings, technical details and pathological studies in 228 Billroth-I-Pean gastrict resections for gastric ulcer, are represented in detail. 186 of these patients could be followed up with a maximum of 18 years: 8.6% had troubles after meals, 8.6% gastritis of the remaining stump, 5.9% a small stomach syndrome and 0.5% a reflux oesophagitis. But no one of them had to be reoperated nor for functional troubles, nor for recurrent ulceration. According to the Visick classification the following results have been obtained: V. 1:75.3%, V. 2:13.4%, V. 3:7.5% and V.4:3.7%.
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PMID:[Should the B-I gastric resection no longer be used? Results of 228 cases (author's transl)]. 65 41

Metoclopramide, 4-amino-5-chloro-2-methoxy-N-(2-diethyl-aminoethyl) benzamide, is advocated for use in gastro-intestinal diagnostics, and in treating various types of vomiting and a variety of functional and organic gastro-intestinal disorders. Published data have indicated that metoclopramide assists radiological identification of lesions in the small intestine, facilitates duodenal intubation and small intestine biopsy, and eases emergency endoscopy in upper gastro-intestinal haemorrhage. Metoclopramide reduces post-operative vomiting and radiation sickness, and ameliorates some types of drug-induced vomiting. It may provide symptomatic relief in dyspepsia and possibly in vertigo, reflux oesophagitis and hiccups, but further controlled trials are needed to confirm the efficacy of metoclopramide in these proposed areas of use. It promotes gastric emptying prior to anaesthesia. Its effects in healing gastric ulcer and preventing relapse of duodenal ulcer remain unproven. Side-effects are few and transient, though alarming extrapyramidal reactions can occur in a small proportion of patients receiving therapeutic doses but more usually following excessive doses in young subjects. They respond rapidly to withdrawal of the drug.
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PMID:Metoclopramide: a review of its pharmacological properties and clinical use. 78 7

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.
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PMID:The treatment of dyspepsia. 92 13

The development of gastric enterochromaffin-like (ECL)-cell hyperplasia in humans may be associated with extreme hypergastrinaemia, as occurs in Zollinger-Ellison syndrome (ZES) and pernicious anaemia (type A gastritis). More recently, endocrine cell hyperplasia has been found in all forms of chronic atrophic gastritis and even in cases of focal atrophy. Serum gastrin levels, non-antral gastric endocrine (argyrophil) cell growth, and the severity and type of concomitant gastritis were monitored in 66 unoperated and 8 antrectomized patients with poorly responsive peptic ulcer or reflux oesophagitis during up to 5 years' treatment with high-dose omeprazole, 40 mg daily. A small subgroup of patients (23%) had serum gastrin concentrations of more than four times the normal upper limit. These patients also had hyperplasia of the gastric argyrophil cells. More importantly, the same subgroup of patients had high-grade (atrophic) gastritis. Micronodular hyperplasia of argyrophil cells was significantly more frequent in biopsies showing atrophic gastritis (48%) than in biopsies showing only superficial gastritis (3.6%). It is concluded that, as previously demonstrated in untreated patients with gastric ulcer, the argyrophil cell hyperplasia observed during high-dose omeprazole therapy is related to the progression of chronic atrophic gastritis rather than to serum gastrin levels.
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PMID:Inter-relationship between serum gastrin levels, gastric mucosal histology and gastric endocrine cell growth. 139 48


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