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Query: UMLS:C0042963 (
vomiting
)
31,883
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Fifty-seven of 101 Nissen fundoplications during the 4-year period, July 1979 to July 1983, were performed on neurologically impaired children. Mean age at the time of surgery was 5.9 years (range 1 month to 22 years). Indications for operation included: persistent
vomiting
, 57 patients (100%); failure to thrive, 49 patients (86%); repeated episodes of pneumonia, 49 patients (86%);
esophagitis
, 18 patients (32%); hiatal hernia, 14 patients (25%); episodes of apnea, 10 patients (18%); and esophageal stricture, six patients (10%). Forty-six of the 57 patients had previously failed a standard trial of nonsurgical management. Gastroesophageal reflux was documented by barium esophagograms in 51/56 patients (91%), chalasia scans in 28/32 patients (88%),
esophagitis
or stricture at endoscopy in 21/23 patients (91%), and acid reflux on pH monitoring in 13/16 patients (80%). Operative management included gastrostomy in 55 of the 57 patients and this was permanent in 50. Gastrostomies had previously been performed in nine patients but had failed to provide a reliable method of enteral feeding because of chronic reflux and aspiration. The surgical complication rate was 12%. Intraoperative esophageal perforation occurred in two patients, splenic tear in one, hepatic vein laceration in one, and a tight wrap in one. After surgery, bowel obstruction from adhesions developed in one patient and a midgut volvulus in another. Five of the children have died, none from causes related to the surgical procedure. Clinical and radiologic follow-up evaluations of all survivors have been done, with a mean follow-up of 3 years. In four patients the repair was felt to be inadequate. One patient had an esophageal stricture and three had recurring episodes of pneumonia. Three children showed radiologic evidence of persistent reflux, but only two were symptomatic. Two patients required a second antireflux procedure for reflux and are now free of symptoms. Nissen fundoplication appears to be a safe and beneficial procedure in neurological impaired children. Long-term follow-up evaluation of these patients showed satisfactory growth as well as a significant decrease in pulmonary disease associated with aspiration.
...
PMID:The effectiveness of Nissen fundoplication in neurologically impaired children with gastroesophageal reflux. 2325 71
A girl aged 4 years and 5 months was admitted because of
vomiting
, poor appetite, epigastrial pain, weight loss and an abnormal posturing of the head and neck since the age of 3 1/2 years. This abnormal posturing consisted of maximal lateral flexion of the head and neck to the left. A number of investigations including EEG and CT-Scan of the head, had been performed repeatedly, and despite normal results various neuropsychiatric diagnoses were made. In our hospital massive gastrooesophageal reflux and
oesophagitis
were demonstrated and the diagnosis of Sandifer's syndrome was established. A fundoplication was performed and the child is free of symptoms since.
...
PMID:[Dystonia as a complication of gastroesophageal reflux: Sandifer syndrome]. 343 9
Gastroesophageal reflux (GER) may induce severe complications in infants: besides
esophagitis
numerous authors have established a relationship between GER and relapsing respiratory infections, between GER and apnea, cyanosis or bradycardia. This required a more precise estimation of the postural treatment than the clinical data of
vomiting
or the weight curve. Esophageal pH studies are considered to be the most valuable investigational technique in case of GER. It allowed us to study the importance of acid reflux in 43 patients under 1 year of age in different postures: 45 degrees upright in an infant-seat, horizontal prone and 30 degrees prone positions.
...
PMID:[Gastroesophageal reflux in infants. Value of orthostatism and ventral decubitus]. 356 41
Esophageal motility was studied in 26 children with gastroesophageal reflux. In 11 patients (group A),
esophagitis
was severe; in the remaining 15 (group B), either mild or no microscopic changes were found. Lower esophageal sphincter pressure and amplitude, as well as velocity and duration of esophageal pressure waves, were manometrically measured. All patients underwent a 12-week intensive antacid course. Manometric tracings, blindly read, were compared with those of 16 age-matched children with
emesis
without proven reflux (group C). Among the variables analyzed, amplitude of the motor waves was significantly lower in patients with severe
esophagitis
than in group B and C patients (P less than 0.01). Nonspecific motor defects (simultaneous, broad-based, double-peaked waves) were more commonly present in group A. At the end of therapy, symptoms had either disappeared or significantly improved. Endoscopic and histologic studies showed disappearance of the severe inflammatory changes. Manometry, repeated in patients with cured severe
esophagitis
, showed normalization of the amplitude and significant decrease of the nonspecific motility abnormalities. We conclude that severe gastroesophageal reflux disease in children causes esophageal motor dysfunction, resulting from esophageal inflammation. The occurrence of esophageal motility disorders only in patients with severe
esophagitis
and its disappearance after therapy may account for the favorable course of reflux disease in infancy.
...
PMID:Esophageal motor abnormalities in children with gastroesophageal reflux and peptic esophagitis. 371 55
Several studies concerning the relationships between gastroesophageal reflux (GOR), gastric emptying and esophageal motility are available. So far, results have been contradictory. The purpose of this work was to study gastric emptying in patients with GOR; to search for simultaneous esophageal motility disorders and to specify their type and frequency; to establish a potential relationship between motor disorders of the esophagus and the stomach in these patients. Thirty-two consecutive patients were selected according to clinical criteria, i.e. presence of at least two of the three characteristic symptoms of GOR, and the data of a three-hour post-prandial pH-metry. Gastric stasis related clinical manifestations (nausea, post-prandial
vomiting
, sensation of abdominal distension or of post-prandial epigastric fullness) were also searched for in all patients. A gastroscopy allowed to score
esophagitis
in each case. All patients, including adult controls underwent an esophageal manometry as well as a radionuclide determination of gastric emptying, after isotopic labelling of the solid (S) and liquid (L) phases of a test meal. The results showed that there was no significant modification of gastric emptying of the S and L phases of the meal in the group of patients with GOR whatever the intensity of the reflux, judged on the pH-metry results and the endoscopic data. Thus the average time of gastric half-emptying of S and L was respectively 115 and 52 min for the patients vs 111 and 51 min for the control group. As well, no correlation was found between the gastric emptying parameters and the presence or absence of clinical signs of gastric stasis or the amplitude of esophageal contraction waves. On an individual basis, two patients showed a significant decrease in gastric emptying of either the S or L phases without any attendant modification in the kinetics of the other. These results suggest that, in the adult, gastric emptying cannot be considered to be a determining factor of GOR and there are no diffuse motility disorders of the upper digestive tract during this illness.
...
PMID:[Gastric emptying of a solid-liquid meal in gastroesophageal reflux in adults]. 372 Nov 14
45 patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) were studied with gastrointestinal endoscopy (42 upper endoscopies and 12 colonoscopies). 28 patients had skin or buccal Kaposi's sarcoma with or without opportunistic infections and 17 had opportunistic infections. 12 patients out of 45 (27 per cent) had 1 or several Kaposi's sarcoma macroscopic gastrointestinal localisations, 12 documented by upper endoscopy and 4 by colonoscopy. Endoscopic biopsies confirmed the diagnosis 5 times out of 16 (31 per cent). 16 patients (38 per cent) had candidosis
oesophagitis
, 1 had ulcerative antritis, 2 had a erythematosus duodenitis, 6 had diffuse inflammatory mucosal colonic changes. The specific abnormalities documented by histology were 1 case of total villous atrophy and 2 cases of cytomegalovirus colitis. The patients with cutaneous Kaposi's sarcoma have more often shown gastrointestinal Kaposi's sarcoma than the patients without Kaposi's sarcoma. The prevalence of tumoral or major (diffuse candidosis
oesophagitis
, ulcerative antritis, active colitis) endoscopic abnormalities documented by upper endoscopy was 40 per cent (10 cases out of 25) in asymptomatic patients, 43 per cent in diarrheic patients (3 cases out of 7) and 60 per cent (6 cases out of 10) in patients with dysphagia, epigastralgic pain or
vomiting
and that of documented by colonoscopy was 75 per cent (3 cases out of 4) in patients with mucus or bloody stools and 14 per cent (1 case out of 7) in diarrheic patients. The main result of the endoscopy on AIDS patients has therefore been the diagnosis of visceral localisations of Kaposi's sarcoma. The appearance of the secondary major lesions related to opportunistic infections is unusual, especially in asymptomatic patients. A systematic endoscopy on these patients remains a disputed question.
...
PMID:[Value of digestive endoscopic examination in acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (45 cases)]. 372 85
Clinical findings, symptoms and predisposing factors were studied in 43 patients with oesophageal candidiasis, 40 patients with peptic
oesophagitis
and 40 normal controls. Oesophageal candidiasis was confirmed cytologically. 2.4% of patients who had undergone gastroscopy had oesophageal candidiasis; only three of them had simultaneous candidiasis of the oral cavity. Cardiac failure, oesophageal varices, hiatus hernia and gastric ulcer were common associated disorders. 42% of patients with candidal
oesophagitis
were symptom-free. Most common symptoms were
vomiting
, retrosternal and epigastric pain. Peptic oesophagitis was more frequently associated with symptoms. Predisposing factors were present in 88% of cases of oesophageal candidiasis: alcoholism, hepatic cirrhosis, diabetes mellitus, malignant tumours and other wasting diseases. 18 patients had had treatment with cimetidine; they included all 13 patients whose candidiasis was first detected at check endoscopy.
...
PMID:[Candidiasis of the esophagus. Prospective study of incidence, type of complaints and predisposing factors]. 373 73
Survival in patients with locally advanced, non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) is relatively short, despite treatment with surgery or radiation. A phase II study of simultaneous continuous infusion 5-fluorouracil and split-course radiation with or without surgery has shown possible improvement in median survival compared with that observed in trials of radiation alone. Past success with etoposide plus cisplatin in NSCLC has led to the addition of etoposide to the 5-fluorouracil plus cisplatin plus radiation combination. Twenty-four stage III NSCLC patients were treated with this three-drug regimen, and a 74% clinical partial remission rate was observed. Thoracotomy was done in eight of these patients; subsequent histologic examination of the resected specimen revealed no residual tumor in four patients (50%) and only microscopic foci of tumor in two patients (25%). Major toxicities were leukopenia, nausea, and
vomiting
. Median leukocyte nadir was 2,900/mm3. A leukocyte count less than 1,000/mm3 was observed in two of 24 patients (8%), one of whom expired from progressive pneumonia. All patients experienced nausea and vomiting, which were classified as moderate in three patients (12%) and severe in four (16%). Moderate to severe
esophagitis
, dermatitis, and pneumonitis were not observed. Median progression-free interval and median survival were not reached after a median follow-up of 163 days.
...
PMID:Phase II trial of etoposide, cisplatin, continuous infusion 5-fluorouracil, and simultaneous split-course radiation therapy in stage III non-small-cell bronchogenic carcinoma. 376 46
Thirty five severely mentally retarded children with significant gastro-esophageal reflux were submitted to surgical treatment. The age range was 2 months to 13 years. Characteristics and presenting symptoms were chronic
vomiting
(62%), merycism (43%), gastro-intestinal blood loss (37%), recurrent pneumonia (65%) and failure to thrive (57%). Barium esophagogram demonstrated free gastro-esophageal reflux in all patients with an associated hiatus hernia being noted in 3 cases. An upper gastro-intestinal endoscopy was performed in 24 children.
Esophagitis
of 2 or 3 degrees was present in 16 cases. A standard medical treatment was used in all patients during 1 month to 3 years. The patients were referred for surgery because they had no response to medical management or they had hiatus hernia or
esophagitis
type II or III. The operative procedure performed was Nissen fundoplication without gastrostomy. The mean duration of follow-up was 5 years (range 6 months to 12 years). We have not reviewed 5 patients. Several post-operative complications occurred: 4 pneumonia (2 deaths), 2 small bowel obstructions, 4 dumping syndrome and 1 death without etiology. Late complications were important too: 6 persistent reflux, 2 small bowel obstructions (2 deaths) and 2 peritonitis (2 deaths). Three patients died of their brain damage during the study period, 6 months to 8 years following their surgical procedure. The authors insist on: The frequency of gastro-esophageal reflux in retardates with a frequent merycism associated. The search for this reflux must be systematically done because it provokes some respiratory problems and a bad general status which distressed the child but also the family or the institution caring for the child.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Nissen's operation in children with brain diseases]. 376 12
Seventy-five patients, 80-90 years old, each having approximately three associated diseases, underwent a total of 104 gastrointestinal endoscopies. Of these, 73 were upper (29 emergencies) and 31 lower endoscopies (21 were rigid sigmoidoscopies). There were two very mild short-lived complications;
vomiting
and bleeding. We found 16 gastric ulcers, 16 duodenal or pyloric ulcers, and 11 cases of
esophagitis
. Bleeding duodenal (8) or gastric (4) ulcers and polyps or malignant tumors (7) were seen less often. In 34 of 68 lesions the endoscopic and x-ray findings were the same. In the other 34 there were 10 endoscopic failures to identify colonic diverticula, hiatus hernia, and gastroesophageal reflux that were seen radiologically. In 24 patients, diagnoses were not made radiologically, but were recognized at endoscopy. The safety and accuracy of endoscopy in the old and sick does not differ from that in younger patients.
...
PMID:Gastrointestinal endoscopy in octagenarians. 378 48
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