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Query: UMLS:C0042963 (
vomiting
)
31,883
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Clinical experience shows that episodes of apnea can occur during regurgitations or
vomiting
. We questioned whether sleep apneas could be related temporally to documented falls in esophageal pH, when no clinical symptoms of
emesis
are witnessed. Twenty infants admitted after an apparently life-threatening event ('
ALTE
') during sleep, but with no clinical symptoms of
vomiting
or regurgitations at the time of the event, and ten control infants were studied. All infants had occasional episodes of regurgitations. Polygraphic monitoring of state of alertness, cardiorespiratory activity and low esophageal pH was performed continuously during 1 night. The data were analyzed blindly. A total of 334 central and 36 obstructive apneas were monitored, mainly in the
ALTE
group, during NREM sleep. A total of 116 falls in esophageal pH below 4 units were seen in 18 infants; 50% occurred during wakefulness, and 31% in REM sleep. Arousals or body movements preceded the pH fall in 50% of the cases. Within 5 min following the reflux onset, 18 central apneas (7.2% of the apneas) were seen. There was no correlation between the duration, or the lowest values of esophageal pH measured, and the number or duration of apneas. No obstructive apnea, bradycardia or arousal followed the falls in esophageal pH. Acid esophageal reflux did not play a significant role in the development of apnea in our population.
...
PMID:Sleep apneas and acid esophageal reflux in control infants and in infants with an apparent life-threatening event. 232 98
To evaluate relationships between gastroesophageal reflux (GER) and the development and onset of apparent life-threatening event(s) (
ALTE
), 16 infants presenting with
ALTE
and 6 control subjects manifesting clinical GER alone were studied using prolonged, esophageal pH monitoring in conjunction with simultaneous pulse oximetry and transthoracic impedance pneumocardiography. Despite the absence of a clinical
vomiting
history in 14 of 16 patients with
ALTE
, the incidence of GER was similar in both groups (patients with
ALTE
vs control subjects, 95% vs 100%). Significant arterial oxygen desaturation (less than 90% for greater than 3 minutes) was monitored during 60 episodes in 14 of 16 infants with
ALTE
, compared with no episodes of reduced arterial oxygen saturation in control subjects. Fifty-four of 60 of these desaturation events commenced within 3.9 +/- 0.4 minutes (mean +/- SD) of onset of a drop in esophageal pH to less than 4.0. Linear regression analysis indicates a significant correlation between duration of esophageal acidification and length of individual hypoxemic episodes (r = .39). Pneumocardiograms were normal in all patients. These data suggest that unsuspected GER is common in infants presenting with
ALTE
and, in these patients, GER may be directly associated with reflex hypoxemic episodes. Prolonged intraesophageal pH monitoring, performed simultaneously with evaluation for apnea, should be considered in all infants presenting with
ALTE
.
...
PMID:Gastroesophageal reflux-induced hypoxemia in infants with apparent life-threatening event(s). 275 70
Fainting syncopal events are caused by a transient functional neuronal paralysis. Reflex syncope happens for brainstem involving mediated by peripherical afferents. Sometimes gastroesophageal reflux (GER) has been implicated in the development of obstructive apnea. Gastroesophageal reflux, despite the absence of a clinical history of
vomiting
and regurgitation, is observed in a significant proportion of infants presenting with
ALTE
(Apparent Life Threatening Event): an episode characterized by some combination of apnea, color change, marked change in muscle tone, choking or gagging. Though a cause-and-effect relationship between GER and the development of
ALTE
remains to be established a possible direct relationship between oesophageal acidification and the onset of alterations in cardiopulmonary function and impairment of consciousness can be hypothesized. We refer the case of two female infants that developed recurrent
ALTE
(s) characterized by paleness, change in muscle tone and loss of consciousness. The infants resulted affected respectively by a mild and severe gastroesophageal reflux (score: 40, > 50); in one case an episode of GER was recorded by the intraoesophageal pH-monitoring during a syncopal episode. The treatment with antiacid drugs was effectual and the infants did not present
ALTE
(s). The cases presented are in favour of a routine search of gastroesophageal reflux in infants presenting with one or recurrent
ALTE
(s). The identification of these infants will permitt to develop a correct strategy of treatment.
...
PMID:[Syncopal fainting episodes and gastroesophageal reflux]. 866 87