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Query: UMLS:C0154059 (Esophagus)
2,950 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Oesophageal computerized dynamic scintigraphy with 99 mTc was used to evaluate oesophageal motility in type 1 (insulin-dependent) diabetic patients without upper gastrointestinal symptoms. Twenty-nine patients, 10 women and 19 men, mean age 38 +/- 12 yr (range 17-55), mean duration of diabetes 15 +/- 8 yr (range 3-30) and 15 controls were studied. Background or proliferative retinopathy was found in 72.4% of patients, incipient or clinical nephropathy in 48.3% and peripheral neuropathy in 62% of them. In all, oesophagitis and/or other disorders of the upper gastrointestinal tract were excluded by barium studies and endoscopy. Oesophagus scintigraphy with 99 mTc sulphur colloid was performed in each subject after fasting for at least 3 hr in the supine position and repeated after few minutes to assess its reproductivity. The rate of passage of the fluid bolus through oesophagus was analyzed by computer and oesophageal transit time (OTT) for the whole oesophagus was measured by time-activity curves. All diabetic patients were screened for autonomic cardiovascular function by standard tests and, on the base of results, assigned to cardiovascular autonomic neuropathy positive (CVAN-positive) or to cardiovascular autonomic neuropathy negative (CVAN-negative) group. Abnormal oesophageal motility (OTT less than 14 sec as mean +/- 2 SD of controls) was found in 68.7% of CVAN-positive and in 15.4% of CVAN-negative patients (p less than 0.05). CVAN-positive patients resulted older and had significantly longer duration of diabetes than other patients. Furthermore, they showed higher frequency of severe retinopathy, nephropathy, peripheral neuropathy and prolonged OTT compared with CVAN-negative patients.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Oesophageal transit time and cardiovascular autonomic neuropathy in type 1 (insulin-dependent) diabetes mellitus. 262 Apr 83

We assessed the accuracy of patient localization of the site of dysphagia and its implications for radiological practice during the barium swallow examination. Several current texts dispute the value of such information. Fifty-two consecutive patients with dysphagia were asked to localize the site of discomfort on the skin surface. The ability of each patient to do so precisely or vaguely was noted. A detailed barium examination of the pharynx, esophagus and stomach was performed. Results suggested that patients who had symptoms more cranial than the sternal notch were highly accurate at localizing disease. Localization became less precise as symptoms moved caudally towards the epigastrium. Lateralization of symptoms was highly accurate in determining the site of pathology. In conclusion, we feel that in certain circumstances the barium examination can be usefully tailored to accelerate examination times, thus reducing radiation exposure and cost whilst improving diagnostic accuracy.
Dis Esophagus 1997 Jul
PMID:Patient perception and localization of dysphagia -- barium study correlation. 928 82

We evaluated the relationship between radionuclide esophageal transit studies and barium swallow appearances in a group of patients following forceful balloon dilatation for the treatment of achalasia of the cardia. Paired erect radionuclide esophageal transit studies and erect barium swallows of a group of patients who had undergone pneumatic balloon dilatation for the treatment of achalasia were analyzed. Indices derived from the radionuclide transit study were the percentage of maximum activity remaining in the esophagus 30 s after swallowing a dilute volume of tracer (A30 s) and the percentage of retained activity remaining at 100 s after washout with a bolus of water (A100 s). Indices derived from the barium swallow were a subjective grading of the degree of esophageal dilatation on a 4-point scale and a similar grading of the maximum distensibility of the gastroesophageal channel. Twenty five pairs of radionuclide and barium studies in 18 patients were analyzed. There was statistically significant correlation between the amount of retained activity on the radionuclide studies and degree of esophageal dilatation on the barium studies (r = 0.69 for A30 s, r = 0.56 for A100 s, P = < 0.01). There was no correlation between the amount of retained activity on the radionuclide studies and the degree of distension of the gastroesophageal channel on barium studies. The relationship between the radionuclide esophageal transit curve and barium appearances of the esophagus following pneumatic balloon dilatation for the treatment of achalasia is complex. The transit study provides unreliable information about the distensibility of the gastroesophageal channel and should not be relied upon in isolation for assessment of the efficacy of treatment.
Dis Esophagus 1998 Jul
PMID:A comparison of barium swallow and erect esophageal transit scintigraphy following balloon dilatation for achalasia. 984 1

The purpose of this study was to correlate gastroesophageal reflux evaluated by 24-h pH study to esophageal motility, diameter of the esophagus and diaphragmatic hiatus, and patient age. We recorded radiographic findings from barium esophagrams in 91 patients (47 women, 44 men) with a mean age of 52 years (range 17-18 years), who had 24-h pH monitoring of the esophagus. All patients had one or more symptoms related to the upper aerodigestive system, and both studies were performed within 2 days of each other. The average diameters of the esophagus and hiatus were 24 mm and 19 mm respectively. The correlation coefficient (r) between patient age and diameter of the esophagus was -0.22. No correlation was found between the diameter of the hiatus and the size of the esophagus or patient age. Esophageal diameter is significantly wider in patients with esophagitis than in patients who have no esophagitis. Thirteen of 27 patients with absent primary peristalsis had abnormal pH results. The diameter of the esophagus may be affected by aging, but was not affected by the presence of dysmotility. The caliber of the hiatus was stable and was narrower than the diameter of the esophagus. The hiatus tended to be wider when esophagitis existed.
Dis Esophagus 1999
PMID:Reflux evaluation: correlation between pH results, esophagitis, esophageal dysmotility, patient age, and esophageal caliber. 1077 Mar 67

The case of a 76-year-old woman with a submucosal tumor of the esophagus, whose principal symptoms were dysphagia and epigastric/retrosternal pain, is reported here. Endoscopy, barium swallow and a CAT scan all pointed to extramucosal localization. The lesion was located in the lower esophagus lying on the stomach fundus. An ulcer in the region of the cardia complicated the tumor. Two sets of conventional biopsies failed to detect malignancy, only inflammation and intestinal metaplasia were seen in the specimens of the mucosa surrounding the ulcer. The endoscopic ultrasonographic findings were an indistinct margin, hypoechogenicity, homogeneous appearance and location within the second and third echographic layer. The surgical resection of the tumor was complemented by an anterior partial fundoplication. The histologic study revealed an inflammatory fibroid polyp, which is a rare, benign, non-capsulated submucosal lesion composed mainly of loose connective tissue and vessels, with an eosinophilic inflammatory component. This lesion is seldom found in the esophagus.
Dis Esophagus 2000
PMID:Inflammatory fibroid polyp of the esophagus. 1100 37

We have been treating patients with operable thoracic esophageal cancer according to our own protocol. It includes the initial concurrent chemoradiotherapy (CRT) followed by continuous CRT or surgery. Patients with good response to initial chemoradiotherapy were allowed to continue chemoradiotherapy, whereas the others were treated with surgery. However, there were two cases which showed discrepancies in the clinicopathological response. Both patients received initial chemoradiotherapy, including two courses of cisplatin (100-120 mg), 5-fluorouracil (750-1000 mg for 4 days) and radiation (44-50 Gy). On completion of the initial chemoradiotherapy, all diagnostic imaging modalities including barium swallow, esophagoscopy, endoscopic ultrasonography and thoracic computed tomography strongly implicated residual tumor with a reduction rate of 40-50%. The patients underwent radical esophagectomy 15-20 days after initial chemoradiotherapy. Pathological specimens only revealed thickening of the esophageal wall due to inflammatory change without residual carcinoma. These facts suggest the current limitations of diagnostic images in evaluating the response to chemoradiotherapy.
Dis Esophagus 2000
PMID:Mismatched clinicopathological response after concurrent chemoradiotherapy for thoracic esophageal cancer. 1100 38

We report the case of a patient with a gastric remnant relapse of an antral carcinoma resected 5 years before and presenting with the clinical feature of a secondary achalasia (pseudoachalasia). In spite of the patient's 4-month history of dysphagia and weight loss that suggested a malignant lesion, barium swallow, repeated endoscopic biopsies and computed tomography (CT) scan of the upper abdomen did not reveal any abnormalities to indicate a recurrence. However, in the following months, because of worsening symptoms, a further CT scan was performed and revealed thickening of the cardia and gastric wall. The patient underwent an exploratory laparotomy that showed an unresectable lesion involving the gastric fundus, the diaphragm and penetrating into the mediastinum, and therefore a palliative jejunostomy was performed.
Dis Esophagus 2000
PMID:Recurrent gastric carcinoma causing pseudoachalasia: case report. 1100 39

The sensitivity of cancers to radiotherapy or chemotherapy may be influenced by susceptibility to apoptosis. We evaluated whether expression of three proteins regulating apoptosis, p53, bcl-2, and bax, could predict the effect of radiotherapy in esophageal cancers. We used immunohistochemical staining for these protein regulators of apoptosis to study biopsy specimens obtained from 25 patients with esophageal squamous cell carcinoma before they underwent preoperative radiotherapy. Effectiveness of radiotherapy was assessed by barium esophagography, esophagoscopy, and computed tomography. Radiotherapy was effective in 12 patients and ineffective in 13 patients. Biopsy specimens from the 25 patients showed expression of p53, bcl-2, and bax to be 48.0%, 32.0%, and 76.0% respectively. Effectiveness of radiotherapy was correlated with p53 expression (p = 0.047), but bcl-2 and bax expression showed no relationship to effectiveness of radiotherapy. Expression of p53 protein in biopsy specimens may predict effectiveness of preoperative radiotherapy in esophageal cancers.
Dis Esophagus 2000
PMID:Expression of p53, bcl-2, and bax as predictors of response to radiotherapy in esophageal cancer. 1120 30

Gastroesophageal reflux is a major postoperative problem in esophageal patients with cancer, and the principal cause is resection of the lower esophageal sphincter. Two new antireflux operations to solve this problem were investigated. The number of patients studied was 139, with a male to female ratio of 5. The reservoir technique was applied to the first 50 patients and the globe technique was used in the remaining 89. Hospital mortality was 9.35%. Patient satisfaction from a reflux standpoint was excellent in 91.4%, good to fair in 6.5%, and poor in 2.1%. Postoperative barium swallow at the first, third, and sixth months showed no reflux in 93% of cases. Postoperative preanastomotic mean pressure was 14.2 mmHg. Postoperative mucosal biopsies revealed a remarkable reduction in esophagitis. The radiologic, manometric, and histologic findings as well as the patient satisfaction rate suggest that these antireflux operations are suitable and effective for patients undergoing esophageal resection and intrathoracic esophagogastric anastomosis.
Dis Esophagus 2000
PMID:Reservoir and globe-type antireflux surgical techniques in intrathoracic esophagogastrostomies. 1128 75

Fibrovascular polyps are rare benign esophageal tumors that usually arise from the proximal third of the esophagus. We present the case of a 48-year-old man with a history of dysphagia and 7-kg weight loss over a period of 2 months. A barium swallow showed a distended esophagus with a tumor extending from the upper esophageal sphincter to the cardia. On a thoracic computed tomographic scan, a homogeneous intramural mass with a density of 22 Hounsfield units was seen, which extended throughout the entire esophagus. Fiberoptic endoscopy confirmed the presence an intramural tumor beginning at the upper esophageal sphincter and reaching to the cardia. The tumor was completely covered with mucosa, except for an ulcerated area at its distal end, which herniated into the stomach. On endoscopic ultrasound, the tumor appeared to grow submucosally and to respect the muscularis propria. Endoscopic biopsies from the ulcerated distal aspect of the tumor suggested a leiomyoma. None of the imaging modalities used revealed evidence of a polyp or intraluminal esophageal tumor. Rather, a potentially malignant extensive intramural tumor was suspected, and an esophagectomy was performed. Only at the time of removal of the specimen did it become evident that the tumor mass was located intraluminally with a pedicle in the region of the upper esophageal sphincter. The final pathological diagnosis was a giant fibrovascular polyp of the esophagus.
Dis Esophagus 2000
PMID:Fibrovascular esophageal polyp as a diagnostic challenge. 1128 84


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