Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0038358 (gastric ulcer)
5,179 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Ninety-two patients with severe gastro-oesophageal reflux submitted to fundoplication from 1979 to 1984 have been studied. Severity of symptoms pre- and postoperatively have been assessed using a symptom score. The mean pre-operative score was 5.39 out of 9. A standard procedure for the fundoplication was used, including a long (5 cm) wrap leaving the wrap in an intrathoracic position when it could not be brought completely into the abdomen. Vagotomy was added in 53 patients. Posterior gastropexy was used in 54 patients. There was a zero incidence of damage to the spleen and a zero mortality. The mean symptom score on follow up was 0.41 out of 9 with 90.5% patients having absent or minimal symptoms. However, only 68% remained satisfied with their overall results. The incidence of sequelae related to the procedure itself including gas bloat (19.6%), dumping (7.6%) diarrhoea (6.5%) and development of gastric ulcer (2.2%) explained this discrepancy. The addition of vagotomy did not improve the results but added its complications especially dumping and diarrhoea. There were no differences in clinical results whether the fundoplication had been left in the chest or in the abdomen but there were two hazardous complications of the intrathoracic fundoplication including a perforated gastric fundus and a gastric ulcer in the thoracic part of the stomach. Posterior gastropexy conferred no benefit to the results. Measures which might improve results include: avoidance of vagotomy, intrathoracic fundoplication and gastropexy; shortening the wrap; and the use of a 50-60 F dilator in the oesophagus during the wrap.
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PMID:Fundoplication for gastro-oesophageal reflux. 387 Jan 65

Ulcer size, age, sex, alcohol and analgesic intake and cigarette consumption were studied in relation to the site of the ulcer in 215 patients with chronic gastric ulcer, of whom 96 were initial and 115 recurrent ulcers. Ulcer site was classified into upper (U), middle (M) and lower (L) thirds of the stomach, on X-ray films of air-contrast barium studies. The ulcers were situated in the upper third in 37 patients (17%), middle third in 90 patients (42%) and lower third in 88 patients (41%), i.e., significantly more in M and L compared to U (p less than 0.001). 135 ulcers were on the lesser curve (63%) with more in L and M compared to U (p less than 0.0005). Posterior wall ulcers accounted for 29.3%. Ulcers were smallest in L (mean 28.8 mm2) compared to those in M (mean 66.1 mm2) and U (mean 64.4 mm2) (p less than 0.001). Mean size overall was 49.0 mm. The mean age of the patients was 58.8 years with no significant differences in age between U, M and L (p greater than 0.9). The M/F ratio in the whole series was 0.6 which varied with ulcer site, being 0.3 in U (differing significantly from the whole series, p less than 0.05), 0.4 in M and 1.2 in L (significantly different from the whole series, p less than 0.01) and from U (p less than 0.01). Initial ulcers did not differ from recurrent ulcers except in women where initial ulcers were more common in M and L, whereas recurrent ulcers were more commin in U. The independent variables, namely, alcohol and analgesics (with the exception of smoking), were not determinants of ulcer site, size or position once the patients were segregated by sex. In men only, there were interactions between L and lesser curve site (p less than 0.004) and L and smoking (p less than 0.03).
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PMID:The location of chronic gastric ulcer: a study of the relevance of ulcer size, age, sex, alcohol, analgesic intake and smoking. 736 61

The article deals with a special case through it's gravity and lesional complexity. A forty years old ill person with esophagus stenosis and postcaustic esophagotracheal fistula, having both a gastric ulcer on the date of surgery is operated in three stages: 1. Vagotomy, pyloroplasty and gastrotomy. 2. Esophagectomy with Kirschner-Nakayama gastric grafting. Posterior tracheorraphy with esophageal muscular patch. 3. Anastomotic cervical stenosis--plastic replacement (grafting) with a fat-less skin.
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PMID:[Esophageal stenosis and esophagotracheal fistula with concomitant gastric ulcer in "caustic soda" ingestion]. 901 67

We report a 54-year-old man with vitamin B12 deficiency myelopathy limited to the upper extremity region. He was well until October, 1995, when he had an onset of exertional dyspnea and general fatigue. Then he noted tingling sensation in bilateral upper extremities in March, 1996. He had undergone total gastrectomy due to gastric ulcer 15 years ago. Neurological examination revealed superficial and vibratory sensory loss in the upper extremities distal to elbows, and pseudoathetoid movement of the left fingers. Otherwise neurological examination was unremarkable. Laboratory examination revealed macrocytic anemia, and low serum vitamin B12. However, serum folate was within the normal range. In SEP studies, median nerve stimulation evoked peripheral N9 and N13 potentials, but not cortical N20 one. Posterior tibial nerve stimulation elicited normal responses. MEP, VEP, needle EMG, and nerve conduction studies gave normal findings. T2-weighted MRI showed high signal intensity lesions at the C1-Th1 level in the posterior column, especially in the cuneate fascicles. The gracile fascicles were spared. This is a very rare case of myelopathy due to vitamin B12 deficiency presenting only sensory disturbances in both upper extremities. The lesions limited in the cuneate fascicle were confirmed by electrophysiological, and neuroradiological examinations.
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PMID:[Myelopathy due to vitamin B12 deficiency presenting only sensory disturbances in upper extremities: a case report]. 916 47