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Pill Esophagitis


Aspirin, NSAIDS, KCl, Fe, quinidine, antibiotics (may cause erosions/strictures)
GERD (Gastroesophageal Reflux Disease)

General: prevalence roughly 30-40%

Presentation: heartburn (pyrosis) and regurgitation; atypical  chest pain, dysphagia, water brash, globus (constant sensation of lump in throat), odynophagia (suggests ulcer or severe esophagitis), hoarseness, nausea (sometimes responds to acid suppression)

Extraesophageal manifestations: asthma (GERD exacerbates, does not cause asthma), chronic cough, nocturnal cough, sinusitis, pneumonitis, laryngitis, hoarseness, hiccups, dental disease



Complications: peptic stricture, Barrett’s esophagus

Ddx: cardiac, esophageal neoplasm, infectious esophagitis, NSAID-induced, caustic exposure, pill esophagitis, esophageal hypersensitivity (visceral hyperalgesia), achalasia, esophageal motility disorder, stricture, gastritis, eosinophilic gastroenteritis, peptic ulcer disease, non-ulcer dyspepsia, hepatobiliary disease, cholelithiasis, bile acid reflux

Diagnosis:

  • therapeutic trial of PPI (sensitivity ~80%); this is the more popular, cost-effective and easiest method

  • esophageal pH monitoring (sensitivity 60-100%); to evaluate equivocal endoscopic findings on patients refractory to PPI (i.e. to see why the PPI isn’t working, still sure of the diagnosis do while on PPI) or with atypical symptoms and need for diagnosis; when considering anti-reflux surgery with negative endoscopy (i.e. you want to do surgery but have to prove the pt really has GERD, do while off PPI x 1 wk)

  • double contrast barium swallow (sensitivity 25%)

Indications for endoscopy: dysphagia/odynophagia, refractory to therapy, immunocompromised, presence of mass, stricture or ulcer on barium study, GI bleeding or iron deficiency anemia, screening for Barrett’s after 5 yrs of symptoms (especially white men > 45; prevalence of Barrett’s similar with or without GERD symptoms (1-2%)

Treatment:

  • antacids, H2 blockers (50% effective), proton pump inhibitors (80% effective, BID dosing may make a difference, switching agents have been reported to make a difference)

  • can also try metoclopramide

  • surgery / post-op complications include perforation, acute gastric herniation (<1%)

Note: may take 2-3 months to achieve resolution even with correct treatment / there is discussion over whether medical management only treats the symptoms and does not prevent the risks of esophageal cancer
Achalasia

Primary causes: idiopathic LES dysfunction, Chagas disease



Epidemiology: 20 to 40 yrs / 1 in 20-100,000 in U.S. (30-50s)

Pathology: degeneration of Auerbach’s plexus, Wallerian degeneration of vagus, and dorsal vagal nucleus / supersensitivity to cholinergics and gastrin  tonic narrowing of LES

Presentation: dysphagia for solids/liquids, weight loss (90%), severe chest pain (60%), nocturnal cough (30%), recurrent bronchitis, pneumonia (8%)

Diagnosis: r/o carcinoma (secondary achalasia)

Radiography: beak-like tapering over LES (bird’s beak)

Manometry: absence of peristalsis, elevated LES pressure, incomplete LES relaxation (although there is a rare form of vigorous achalasia with large-amplitude prolonged contractions

Treatment:

Drugs: nitrates, anticholinergics, ß-agonists, Ca channel blockers are 50% effective

prostaglandins under investigation



  • Pneumatic dilation – 70-90% effective (0.2% mortality, 2-3% perforation)

  • Endoscopic injection of botulinum toxin – helpful in 70-80%

  • Heller myotomy – 65-90% success rate (3-4% complications) / increased reflux years later in 25-30%

  • Endoscopic myotomy – under investigation


Transfer Dysphagia

CVA (transient brainstem edema), myasthenia gravis, myotonic dystrophy, polymyositis, bulbar poliomyelitis, Parkinson’s disease, multiple sclerosis, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, hypothyroidism


Diffuse Esophageal Spasm (SDES)

Primary idiopathic or secondary (collagen vascular disease, radiation, diabetes)



Presentation: dysphagia, odynophagia (esp. after hot or cold liquid/solid), spontaneous chest pain (actually relieved by nitroglycerin)

Diagnosis:

radiography corkscrew-shaped esophagus

esophageal manometry 30% of basal state with spastic contractions / nutcracker esophagus (contractions associated with chest pain)

30% with incomplete LES relaxation / some normal contractions present

balloon distension of lumen lower threshold of pain upon insufflation

Treatment: 50% success rate with anticholinergics, nitrates, calcium channel blockers, bougienage, hydralazine (decreases amplitude), surgery in severe cases (longitudinal myotomy)
Scleroderma (see connective tissue)

Pathology: early – neural degeneration / late – atrophy of circular smooth muscle

Clinical findings: dysphagia, severe reflux/heartburn (50%), stricture (25%)

Radiography – poor emptying

Manometry – decreased LES pressure / weak contractions in distal 2/3

Treatment: anti-reflux therapy
Esophageal Cancer (very bad prognosis)

Epidemiology: male 4:1 / blacks 4:1 / incidence in U.S. 1 in 25,000 whites (50-70 yrs) / 1 in 8,000 blacks / worst in China and Iran / almost always malignant / esophagus has NO serosa / currently, in US, 50% adenocarcinoma, 50% squamous cell

Risk Factors: alcohol, smoking, GERD (Barrett’s esophagitis; 10% risk, endoscopy q 2-3 yrs), hot liquids, burns, radiation, malnutrition (vitamin A and C deficiency), nitrosamines, burns (lye ingestion), achalasia (10% risk), Tylosis (hyperkeratosis of palms, soles; 80% develop squamous cell Ca of esophagus), celiac sprue, Plummer-Vinson syndrome

Presentation: progressive dysphagia (1.2 cm narrowing), pain (extension beyond esophagus), dysphagia for liquids, cough, hoarseness, weight loss signify advanced esophageal cancer

Diagnosis: barium swallow, endoscopy (90% sensitive; down to 1 cm), CT and bronchoscopy

Treatment: surgery for distal lesions 5 yrs survival only 5-10%, radiotherapy for proximal lesions, stent placement or bougienage, laser therapy, chemotherapy regimens under investigation (currently no strong evidence for using chemotherapy in esophageal cancer 5/00)

Complications: ruptured esophagus thoracotomy and repair / antibiotics

gastrograffin study later / 50% die if untreated / avoid mediastinitis, pneumomediastinum and pneumothorax


Stomach [diagram]
Physiology

body – chief cells – pepsinogen

body - parietal – H+ ions / IF?

antrum - G-cells – gastrin


solids empty in 2 phases over 3-4 hrs / initial lag period while particles broken to 2 mm or less followed by period of constant emptying
Congenital
Diaphragmatic hernias

usually on the left


Pyloric stenosis

congenital hypertrophic pyloric stenosis - multifactorial / projectile vomiting / 1 in 300

acquired pyloric stenosis - gastritis, peptic ulcer, cancer
Gastritis
Acute gastritis

NSAIDS, alcohol, chemo, infection, smoking, uremia, ischemia, mech. injury, etc.

superficial erosion / may result in severe hemorrhage
Chronic gastritis
type A – uncommon

patchy autoimmune disease / occurs in body-fundus mucosa / 50% prevalence in elderly / associated with pernicious anemia, achlorhydria



Risk factors: alcohol/smoking, antrectomy, radiation, granulomatous disease, etc.

Pathology: regenerative change, metaplasia (glands become more antral/intestinal), atrophy (flattening, loss of glands)

Complications: MAG and DCAG lead to Ca in situ
type B – common

H. pylori (antral mucosa) / not invasive, Giemsa or Warthin-Starry stain, serum Ab,

urease in biopsy, histology/culture, breath test
diffuse (DAG) only antrum / 50% over 60 population

multifocal (MAG) intestinal metaplasia / hypochlorhydria


Diffuse corporal atrophic gastritis (DCAG)

antibodies directed against parietal cells / 10% get pernicious anemia / increased gastrin


Gastric Ulceration (PUD)
Do not have to biopsy if it heals with medical management

Elective surgery for outlet obstruction, hypochloremia, hyponatremia


Reactive (erosive) gastropathy

has not yet perforated muscularis / requires pepsin and acid secretion

Risk Factors: NSAID, smoking, alcohol, corticosteroids, stress, H. pylori (30-60% of non-NSAID-related gastric ulcers) (see below)
Acute gastric ulceration

penetration of muscularis / requires gastric acid / shock, burns (Curling’s), sepsis, trauma, acidosis, CNS-mediated from ICP and hypothalamic changes (Cushing’s) / more severe version of acute gastritis / multiple lesions in any location / scarring and vessel thickening absent / 5 - 10 % of all ICU patients / radiating mucosal folds, sloping distal margin (benign)


shock ulcers

mostly fundus / bleed but do not penetrate



Treatment: endoscopic coagulation, surgery (ligation or gastrectomy +/- vagotomy)
Cushing’s ulcer (increased H+ secretion)

solitary, antral, deep / may perforate


Chronic peptic ulcer

5-10% lifetime incidence / DU more common, younger, (type O, nonsecretors, HLA B5), rapid gastric emptying, increased acid




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