Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0042963 (vomiting)
31,883 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A questionnaire study was conducted to assess the prevalence and severity of symptoms suggestive of esophageal disorders in a general population. The study included 407 randomly selected subjects, evenly distributed in terms of sex and age, within the age span of 20-79 years. A total of 337 subjects replied (85%). Symptoms suggestive of gastroesophageal reflux were found among 25% of the participants. Cough on swallowing was common (27%), as was globus (16%) and chest pain (13%). In addition, dysphagia was reported by 10% and vomiting by 9%. The symptoms were usually mild, and moderate to severe symptoms were reported only occasionally (1-4%). No statistical correlation was found between esophageal symptoms and age, sex, or the reported consumption of tobacco, alcohol, or non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs. The frequency of heartburn and/or acid regurgitation was twice as common among those with symptoms of respiratory disease as among those with no respiratory complaints. A stepwise logistic regression analysis showed that a chronic cough and/or breathing difficulties were significantly related to the presence of symptoms suggestive of gastroesophageal reflux.
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PMID:The prevalence of symptoms suggestive of esophageal disorders. 200 1

The trial randomly assigned 652 patients with non-ulcer dyspepsia (NUD), defined as chronic or recurrent complaints of acid-related (heartburn, acid regurgitation, epigastric pain) and non-acid related (fullness/vomiting, nausea) symptoms and with no evidence of organic disease, to treatment for 4 weeks with 150 mg of ranitidine (Zantic, CAS 66357-59-3) twice a day, or placebo, according to a double-blind design. The presence and duration of all dyspeptic symptoms were recorded by interviews at the beginning and after 2 and 4 weeks of treatment as well as by diaries. The complete disappearance of all dyspeptic symptoms after 4 weeks in the placebo group was 36%; ranitidine treatment resulted in a significant improvement after 4 weeks (p < 0.05). The effect of ranitidine was slightly more pronounced in acid-related than in non-acid-related symptoms. We conclude that suppression of gastric acid secretion is of clinical value in NUD patients, especially in those suffering from epigastric pain, acid regurgitation and heartburn.
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PMID:Ranitidine in the treatment of non-ulcer dyspepsia. A placebo-controlled study in the Federal Republic of Germany. 781 86

The aim of the study was to assess the association of abdominal symptoms in a random sample of a general population and to find whether the associations could be confirmed at follow-up 5 years later. The study population was a sex- and age-stratified random sample of people living in the western part of Copenhagen County, Denmark. Of 4807 eligible subjects 79% attended the study and filled in a questionnaire on abdominal symptoms. Five years later the study was repeated and 85% of the survivors participated. Data from both studies were analysed separately for sex, age group and the following pain variables: unspecified abdominal pain, pain located to the epigastrium, pain provoked by stress or hunger, pain relieved by eating and pain relieved by defecation. Three clusters of symptoms occurred in all the analyses: borborygmi/altering stool consistency/distension; acid regurgitation/heartburn and nausea/vomiting. Unspecified pain was associated with all three clusters, pain provoked by stress or hunger and pain relieved by defecation associated with the borborygmi/altering stool/distension cluster, whereas pain in the epigastrium and pain relieved by eating did not show consistent relationships to any of the clusters. Additionally, the clusters associated with each other more often than could be expected by chance. As a consequence of our findings we suggest that the three clusters of symptoms constitute three common abdominal syndromes.
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PMID:Abdominal symptom associations in a longitudinal study. 814 91

Patients with endoscopically confirmed oesophagitis (n = 49) were treated for 8 weeks with either cisapride (10 mg four times a day) or ranitidine (150 mg twice a day) in a double-blind study in general practice. Mean overall symptom scores fell from 10.8 to 4.5 in the cisapride group and from 9.9 to 4.4 in the ranitidine group over the course of the study. The proportion of patients reporting improvements in individual symptoms in the two treatment groups (cisapride and ranitidine respectively) were: heartburn, 66% and 55%; acid regurgitation, 53% and 47%; epigastric pain, 60% and 52%; satiety, 57% and 47%; bloating, 69% and 71%; belching, 65% and 72%; nausea, 62% and 85%; vomiting, 77% and 66%; poor appetite, 50% and 75%. Improvement in the endoscopic grade of oesophagitis was observed in 66% of patients receiving cisapride and 63% of those receiving ranitidine. It was concluded that cisapride is as effective as ranitidine in relieving the symptoms of oesophagitis and in healing oesophageal erosions.
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PMID:Comparing the efficacy of cisapride and ranitidine in oesophagitis: a double-blind, parallel group study in general practice. 817 73

An open prospective drug monitoring study was undertaken to assess the efficacy and tolerability of 5 mg cisapride three times daily in 37,925 general practice patients with functional dyspepsia. Short-term (mean, 4 weeks) cisapride treatment was associated with a significant reduction in overall dyspeptic symptom scores and improvements in scores of all eight individual dyspeptic symptoms (epigastric discomfort, fullness, nausea, bloating, heartburn, acid regurgitation, loss of appetite, and vomiting). Physician's and patient's subjective global evaluations of antidyspeptic efficacy were good or very good in 80% to 90% of cases. The tolerability of cisapride was judged to be satisfactory, good or very good in approximately 95% of patients, with adverse drug reactions being documented in 4.8% of patients. Of these, diarrhea/loose stools (2.5% of all patients) and headache (0.7%) were most frequent. Premature treatment withdrawal due to poor tolerability was necessary in only 0.35% of patients.
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PMID:A German drug-monitoring study in general practice patients receiving cisapride for functional dyspepsia. 851 60

It has been suggested that vomiting acid gastric contents in bulimia might favor oral growth of Streptococcus sobrinus. We studied the colonization of Streptococcus sobrinus (serotypes g and d) and Streptococcus mutans (serotypes c, e and f) in sixteen children, ages five to fifteen years, who had suffered for four to eleven years from gastroesophageal reflux, another condition with recurrent acid regurgitation. Our aim was to find out if the prevalence of Streptococcus sobrinus would be higher also in this patient group. Mutants streptococci were detected in twelve out of sixteen (75 percent) study patients of the saliva samples cultured on MSB agar. For the Mutans streptococci positive children healthy controls were matched by salivary levels of mutans streptococci and age as closely as possible. From each child three to six isolates representing both Streptococcus mutans and Streptococcus sobrinus (n = 103) were serotyped by immunodiffusion method. The distribution of serotypes in the study/control group was: c: 7/10; e: 4/2; f: 0/1; g:3/2; d:0/0. One strain in the study group remained untypable. All patients infected with Streptococcus sobrinus were also infected with Streptococcus mutans. Our results indicate the great similarity in the distribution of ms serotypes in the gastroesophageal reflux children and their healthy controls. The data do not suggest that the acid regurgitation would have an influence on the prevalence of Streptococcus sobrinus.
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PMID:Mutans streptococcal serotypes in children with gastroesophageal reflux disease. 926 2

The present study was undertaken to estimate the prevalence and time course of reflux-type symptoms in Singaporean women and to determine if these symptoms were associated with nausea and vomiting of pregnancy. Consecutive pregnant women in the first trimester of pregnancy were recruited during attendance at an antenatal clinic in a Singapore teaching hospital. Each was interviewed, using a reliable questionnaire detailing demographic characteristics and symptoms, at four time points during the first, second and third trimesters of pregnancy and postpartum period. A total of 35 of 47 women originally enrolled (response rate 74%) completed the study. Heartburn alone, acid regurgitation alone and both heartburn and acid regurgitation were reported by 5.7, 17.1 and 17.1% of the subjects, respectively. Subjects who had these symptoms were more likely to suffer daily nausea and/or vomiting (78.6%) than those who did not (33.3%, P<0.05). In the majority of subjects, heartburn and/or acid regurgitation began in the first trimester (78.6%) and disappeared during the second trimester (71.4%). Nausea alone and in combination with vomiting similarly came on in the first trimester (100%) and subsided by the second trimester (85.7%) in the majority of the subjects studied. The reported prevalence of heartburn and/or acid regurgitation among Western pregnant women were 48-96% and 62%, respectively. Our data, therefore, showed that reflux-type symptoms were less common in Singaporean pregnant women. Reflux-type symptoms were related to nausea and vomiting, both in frequency and time pattern of onset and disappearance of symptoms. The association suggested either a common mechanism or a cause and effect relationship.
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PMID:Symptomatic gastro-oesophageal reflux in pregnancy: a prospective study among Singaporean women. 983 18

Dyspepsia is defined as chronic or recurrent pain or discomfort centred in the upper abdomen. Early satiety, nausea, vomiting, or bloating are often also present. Dyspepsia should be differentiated from gastro-oesophageal reflux disease, whose predominant symptoms are heartburn and acid regurgitation. Prevalence rates vary between 25% and 40%, and dyspepsia is the main reason for consulting GPs: 3-5% of all visits. Older patients and patients presenting with alarm symptoms (weight loss, anaemia, jaundice, dysphagia, bleeding) should undergo endoscopy, but apart from this no other management strategy has been agreed upon. Management strategies based on non-invasive H. pylori testing will probably prove cost-effective and safe. However, the results of clinical trials are awaited before guidelines can be offered. The symptomatic effects of treating patients with functional dyspepsia with either acid inhibitors, prokinetics, or H. pylori eradication therapy are difficult to predict and are usually quite modest.
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PMID:[Dyspepsia. Investigation and treatment]. 1157 69

Laparoscopic Roux-en-Y (RY) gastric bypass is an effective treatment for morbid obesity. However, little information is available regarding the gastrointestinal symptomatic outcome after laparoscopic RY gastric bypass for morbid obesity. The purpose of this study is to identify changes occurring in gastrointestinal symptoms after laparoscopic RY gastric bypass. A previously validated, 19-point gastrointestinal symptom questionnaire was administered prospectively to each patient seen for surgical consultation to treat morbid obesity. Patients rated the degree to which each symptom affected their lives on a 0 to 100 mm Liekert scale with 0 indicating absence of a symptom, 33 indicating the symptom was present occasionally, 67 indicating the symptom occurred frequently, and 100 indicating the symptom was continuous. The same survey was readministered 6 months postoperatively. The mean of each symptom (preoperative vs. postoperative value) was compared using Student's t test with significance at P<0.05. Forty-three preoperative patients (age 37.3+/-8.6 years; body mass index 47.8+/-4.9) and thirty-five, 6 months' postoperative patients (81% follow-up; body mass index 31.6+/-5.3) completed the questionnaire. The result for each symptom is expressed as mean+/-standard deviation of preoperative vs. postoperative scores. Significantly different symptoms include the following: abdominal pain 23.3+/-26.4 vs. 8.6+/-13.5, P=0.003; heartburn 34.0+/-26.6 vs. 8.0+/-14.0, P=0.0001; acid regurgitation 28.1+/-24.0 vs. 10.7+/-21.0, P=0.001; gnawing in epigastrium 19.3+/-22.7 vs. 7.5+/-16.0, P=0.01; abdominal distention 38.2+/-31.5 vs. 11.1+/-19.2, P=0.0001; eructation 27.7+/-24.4 vs. 15.5+/-16.9, P=0.01; increased flatus 40.2+/-25.7 vs. 25.2+/-25.3, P=0.005; decreased stools 5.4+/-16.8 vs. 17.4+/-20.0, P=0.0005; increased stools 23.9+/-26.7 vs. 6.5+/-11.7, P=0.0005; loose stools 29.7+/-26.5 vs. 17.5+/-20.0, P=0.03; urgent defecation 34.3+/-26.5 vs. 14.3+/-19.3, P=0.0009; difficulty falling asleep 44.1+/-38.4 vs. 27.5+/-32.9, P=0.05; insomnia 42.4+/-36.2 vs. 21.6+/-30.5, P=0.008; and rested on awakening 65.1+/-33.8 vs. 30.5+/-28.8, P=0.0001. Symptoms that did not significantly change included the following: nausea/vomiting 17.2+/-22.7 vs. 22.1+/-19.9, P=0.33; borborygmus 28.8+/-25.2 vs. 26.8+/-29.7, P=0.75; hard stools 10.3+/-22.9 vs. 7.1+/-18.6, P=0.56; incomplete evacuation of stool 17.2+/-22.8 vs. 13.4+/-21.7, P=0.45; and dysphagia 10.9+/-15.6 vs. 17.7+/-28.4, P=0.18. Laparoscopic RY gastric bypass significantly improves many gastrointestinal symptoms experienced by morbidly obese patients without adversely affecting any of the measured parameters. This information is useful in preoperative counseling to assure patients of overall symptomatic improvement after this operation in addition to significant weight loss and improvement of comorbid conditions.
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PMID:Gastrointestinal symptomatic outcome after laparoscopic Roux-en-Y gastric bypass. 1312 51

The prevalence of gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) increases with age, and older people are more likely to develop severe disease. Studies of elderly patients with GERD indicate differences in presentation and diagnosis, compared with GERD in younger adults. Indeed, an older patient with GERD may present with atypical symptoms such as dysphagia, vomiting, weight loss, anaemia and anorexia, and less frequently with typical symptoms such as heartburn or acid regurgitation. These findings are attributed to pathophysiological changes in esophageal function that occur with age. Therefore, GERD in elderly patients is more likely to be poorly diagnosed or undiagnosed. Although few studies have concentrated specifically on elderly patients, the proton pump inhibitors (PPIs) have been shown to be more effective than histamine receptor antagonists for healing reflux esophagitis and for preventing its recurrence when they are given as maintenance therapy. In addition, the PPIs seem to be safe both in short- and in long-term therapy of elderly patients with GERD.
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PMID:Recent advances in the treatment of GERD in the elderly: focus on proton pump inhibitors. 1617 89


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