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  • gastroesophageal reflux disease  (5)
  • esophageal motility disorders  (4)
  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Digestive diseases and sciences 35 (1990), S. 1445-1451 
    ISSN: 1573-2568
    Keywords: chest pain ; esophageal motility disorders ; edrophonium ; diffuse spasm
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Edrophonium chloride is used frequently as a provocative agent in the assessment of noncardiac chest pain (NCCP). However, the optimum dose and most appropriate method of interpreting test results is controversial. We studied 150 consecutive NCCP patients and 50 age-matched controls who alternately received either 80 μg/kg or 10 mg intravenous bolus doses of edrophonium preceded by saline placebo injections. Distal esophageal pressures were measured before and after drug injection in response to ten 5-cc wet swallows. Following 10 mg of edrophonium, 33% of patients and 4% of controls reported chest pain, while 29% of patients and no controls receiving the 80 μg/kg dose complained of chest pain. Amplitude changes after either dose were not significantly different for all comparisons, but the duration of response did distinguish the two doses in patients with chest pain. A significantly greater (P=0.01) increase in distal contraction duration occurred after 10 mg (74±12%; ±se) compared to 80 μg/kg dose (43± 6%). However, individual responses to the two doses overlapped considerably. If a positive test is redefined to include both chest pain and manometric changes that are significantly different from controls, the positivity rate changes drastically; 33% to 9% in the 10- mg group and 30% to 3% in the 80- μg/kg group. Side effects were similar between doses, but there was a significant (P=0.02) linear relationship between intensity of side effects and the edrophonium dose per kilogram of body weight. From this study and a review of the literature, we conclude that either dose of edrophonium is appropriate for provocative testing but that the interpretation of results is dependent upon technique.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1573-2568
    Keywords: gastroesophageal reflux disease ; esophageal motility disorders ; chest pain ; diffuse spasm
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Prolonged ambulatory esophageal pH and pressure monitors are being developed to evaluate noncardiac chest pain. This new technology needs comparison with conventional esophageal tests before determining which studies are most useful in diagnosing and treating esophageal chest pain. Therefore, we studied 45 patients with esophageal manometry, acid perfusion and edrophonium tests, and 24 hr pH and pressure monitoring. Manometry was abnormal in 20 patients (44%) with nutcracker esophagus, the most common motility disorder. Fifteen (33%) had positive acid perfusion test and 24 (55%) positive edrophonium test. During ambulatory monitoring, all patients experienced chest pain with a total of 202 individual events: 32 events (15%) secondary to acid reflux, 15 (7%) secondary to motility abnormalities, 7 (3%) to both pH and pressure changes, and 149 events (74%) occurred in the absence of any abnormal pH or motility changes. Patients with normal manometry were significantly (P〈0.01) more likely to have acid reflux chest pain events than did nutcracker patients, who had an equal frequency of pH and motility events. A positive acid perfusion test was significantly associated with abnormal pressure events (P=0.02; odds ratio 5.95), while a positive edrophonium test more likely predicted acid reflux chest pain during 24-hr monitoring (P=0.007; odds ratio 7.25). Therefore, abnormal manometry and positive provocative tests point to the esophagus as the likely source of chest pain. However, ambulatory pH and pressure monitoring are required to accurately define the relationship between chest pain and acid reflux or motility disorders. Acid reflux is the most common identifiable cause of esophageal chest pain, while motility disorders are much less frequent than previously suggested by laboratory tests.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 3
    ISSN: 1573-2568
    Keywords: esophageal peristalsis ; esophageal motility disorders ; diffuse esophageal spasm ; high-amplitude peristalsis
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Although esophageal manometry is widely used in clinical practice, the normal range of esophageal contraction parameters is poorly defined. Therefore, 95 healthy volunteers (mean age: 43 years; range 22–79 years) were studied with a low-compliance infusion system and 4.5-mm-diameter catheter. All subjects were given 10 wet swallows (5 cc H2O) and 38 subjects also were given 10 dry swallows. Results: Amplitude, but not duration, was greater (P〈0.05) after wet compared to dry swallows. Both distal mean contractile amplitude and duration of wet swallows significantly increased with age and peaked in the fifties. Double-peaked waves frequently occurred after both wet (11.3%) and dry (18.1%) swallows, but triple-peaked waves were rare (〈1%). Nonperistaltic contractions were more common (P〈0.001) after dry compared to wet swallows (18.1% vs 4.1%). This difference resulted from frequent simultaneous contractions after dry swallows (12.6% vs 0.4%). Conclusions: (1) Distal esophageal contractile amplitude and duration after wet swallows increases with age. (2) Triple-peaked waves and wet-swallow-induced simultaneous contractions should suggest an esophageal motility disorder. Double-peaked waves are a common variant of normal. (3) Dry swallows have little use in the current evaluation of esophageal peristalsis.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 4
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Digestive diseases and sciences 37 (1992), S. 667-672 
    ISSN: 1573-2568
    Keywords: prolonged esophageal pH monitoring ; gastric pH monitoring ; lower esophageal sphincter ; gastroesophageal reflux disease
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Recent studies have suggested that combined monitoring of the esophagus and stomach for prolonged periods may be the best method for investigating patients with upper gastrointestinal complaints. However, the effects of an electrode across the LES on esophageal reflux parameters have not been extensively studied. We studied 10 healthy volunteers and 10 patients with GERD twice with 24-hr pH monitoring. In phase 1, two glass electrodes were placed 1 cm below the UES and 5 cm above the LES. One week later in phase 2, patients were restudied with one electrode 5 cm above and one 5 cm below the LES. Although total acid exposure remained the same in healthy volunteers, three volunteers who spontaneously refluxed at night had abnormal prolongation of their supine acid exposure during phase 2 of the study. In patients with GERD, the electrode across the LES resulted in significant (P=0.01) increase in supine acid exposure and showed a strong tendency for the number of reflux episodes 〉5 min supine (P=0.02) and longest reflux episode supine (P=0.06) to increase without a change in the number of reflux episodes. In conclusion, a small glass electrode across the LES results in prolongation of supine acid exposure in both healthy volunteers spontaneously refluxing at night and the majority of patients with GERD. This results from the electrode interfering with clearance of refluxed acid in the supine position. Thus, combined esophageal and gastric pH monitoring may have important limitations in investigating gastroesophageal symptoms.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 5
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Digestive diseases and sciences 37 (1992), S. 849-856 
    ISSN: 1573-2568
    Keywords: gastroesophageal reflux disease ; 24-hr pH tests ; esophageal tests ; ambulatory monitoring
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Although the most sensitive and specific test for diagnosing gastroesophageal reflux disease, normal standards for prolonged esophageal pH monitoring are based on small sample sizes with questions raised about the effects of pH electrode, older age, gender, and methods of data analysis on pH variables. Recently three groups have established normal data bases using similar methodology. Multiple regression and nonparametric analyses showed that the values for the six traditional pH parameters were comparable across study centers. Therefore, the groups were combined for a total study population of 110 healthy subjects (47 men, 63 women, mean age 38 years with a range of 20–84 years). Further nonparametric analyses revealed the following: (1) type of pH electrode (antimony vs glass) is not significantly related to parameters of physiologic acid reflux; (2) age is not independently related to pH parameters; (3) men tend to have more physiologic reflux than women; and (4) older men tend to experience longer episodes of reflux than younger men and women. There was a significant effect of gender and a significant interaction between age and gender on the number of episodes 〉5 min (P=0.008). Nearly significant differences were found for percentage of total acid exposure time (P=0.03), total reflux episodes (P=0.02), and the longest reflux episode (P=0.02). We believe these normal esophageal pH values can be used confidently as standards in any laboratory, and consideration should be given to developing separate standards for men and women.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 6
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Digestive diseases and sciences 38 (1993), S. 1402-1408 
    ISSN: 1573-2568
    Keywords: heartburn ; chest pain ; gastroesophageal reflux disease ; 24-hr esophageal pH test ; symptom index
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract The symptom index is a quantitative measure developed for assessing the relationship between gastroesophageal reflux and symptoms. Controversy exists, however, over its accuracy and the appropriate threshold for defining acid-related symptoms of heartburn and chest pain. Therefore, a retrospective review was done of 153 consecutive patients referred to our esophageal laboratory. Three groups were identified: patients with normal 24-hr pH tests and no esophagitis, patients with abnormal 24-hr pH tests and no esophagitis, and patients with abnormal 24 hr pH values and endoscopic esophagitis. If symptoms occurred during the pH study, a symptom index (number of acid related symptoms/total number of symptoms x 100%) was calculated separately for heartburn and chest pain. Heartburn and chest pain episodes were similar among the three groups. However, the mean symptom index for heartburn was significantly (P〈0.001) higher in the patient groups with abnormal pH values [abnormal pH/no esophagitis: 70±7.1% (±se); abnormal pH/esophagitis: 85±4.6%] as compared to those with normal studies, ie, functional heartburn (26±10.7%). The mean symptom index for chest pain was similar for all three groups. Using receiver operating characteristic curves, a heartburn symptom index≥50% had excellent sensitivity (93%) and good specificity (71%) for acid reflux disease, especially if patients complain of multiple episoldes of heartburn. In contrast, an optimal symptom index threshold for defining acid-related chest pain episodes could not be defined.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 7
    ISSN: 1573-2568
    Keywords: prolonged ambulatory esophageal pH monitoring ; gastroesophageal reflux disease ; lower esophageal sphincter
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Limiting the widespread use of 24-hr pH monitoring is the necessity of manometrically placing the pH probe 5 cm above the proximal lower esophageal sphincter (LES) border. Therefore, we prospectively compared LES localization by gastroesophageal pH step-up with manometry in 71 patients and 14 asymptomatic volunteers. The gastroesophageal pH step-up significantly correlated with the proximal LES border in patients (r=0.53, P〈0.0001) and volunteers (r=0.91, P〈0.0001). Based on previously published criteria, the pH step-up value was considered acceptably accurate if it was within ±3 cm (6 cm total span) of the manometrically determined proximal LES border. In 58% of patients and 29% of volunteers the pH step-up occurred outside this accuracy range. Esophagitis (P=0.015) and abnormal reflux parameters (P=0.002) were variables contributing to this error. Subsequent analysis found that the pH step-up overestimated the proximal LES border and occurred at the midportion of the sphincter. The pH step-up still inaccurately located the mid LES in 34% of patients. Therefore, manometry should remain the standard for accurate LES localization prior to placing the pH probe.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 8
    ISSN: 1573-2568
    Keywords: esophageal motility disorders ; chest pain ; psychological stress ; esophageal contraction amplitude ; nutcracker esophagus ; diffuse esophageal spasm
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract The present study was designed to explore the relationship between psychological stress and esophageal motility disorders. Nineteen non-cardiac chest pain patients (10 with the nutcracker esophagus and nine with normal baseline manometry) and 20 healthy control subjects were administered two acute stressors: intermittent bursts of white noise and difficult cognitive problems. The results indicated that the esophageal contraction amplitudes and levels of anxiety-related behaviors of non-cardiac chest pain patients and control subjects were significantly greater during the stressors than during baseline periods. All patients demonstrated significantly greater (P〈0.01) increases in contraction amplitude and anxiety-related behavior during cognitive problems than during the noise stressor. The nutcracker esophagus patients showed a greater increase in contraction amplitude during the problems (23.50±9.42 mm Hg, ¯X ±SE) than control subjects (P〈0.01), while the amplitude changes of chest pain patients with normal baseline manometry were not significantly greater than that of control subjects (9.00±1.91 mm Hg). The present results identified an increase in contraction amplitude as the primary esophageal response to stress. The possible interaction of esophageal contraction abnormalities, psychological stress, and the perception of chest pain is discussed.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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