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1.
Dig Dis Sci ; 39(3): 648-54, 1994 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8131704

ABSTRACT

The purpose of the present study was to prospectively determine if healing of esophagitis as assessed by endoscopy results in improved esophageal motility. Thirty-one patients with erosive esophagitis who were randomized to receive either omeprazole 20 mg once daily or placebo completed the double-blind study. All patients underwent endoscopy and esophageal motility before treatment and at four weeks after treatment. Twenty-two healthy volunteers underwent esophageal manometry and served as normal controls. Manometric tracings were coded, randomized, and analyzed blindly. Compared to normal controls, patients with esophagitis had significantly lower LESP, decreased amplitude of peristaltic contractions, and increased occurrence of abnormal contractions. Omeprazole was superior to placebo in healing of esophagitis. However, healing of esophagitis was not associated with any improvement in esophageal motility. The manometric data suggest that the motility disturbance seen in esophagitis is not secondary to the esophagitis but rather a primary phenomenon. The lack of improvement of esophageal motility with healing may explain the high recurrence of esophagitis in clinical trials following discontinuation of omeprazole.


Subject(s)
Esophagitis/pathology , Esophagus/physiopathology , Double-Blind Method , Esophagitis/drug therapy , Esophagitis/physiopathology , Esophagoscopy , Female , Humans , Male , Manometry , Middle Aged , Omeprazole/therapeutic use , Peristalsis/physiology , Prospective Studies
2.
Dig Dis Sci ; 31(7): 724-31, 1986 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2873002

ABSTRACT

Zinc absorption was measured in 29 patients with inflammatory bowel disease and a wide spectrum of disease activity to determine its relationship to disease activity, general nutritional state, and zinc status. Patients with severe disease requiring either supplementary oral or parenteral nutrition were excluded. The mean 65ZnCl2 absorption, in the patients, determined using a 65Zn and 51Cr stool-counting test, 45 +/- 17% (SD), was significantly lower than the values, 54 +/- 16%, in 30 healthy controls, P less than 0.05. Low 65ZnCl2 absorption was related to undernutrition, but not to disease activity in the absence of undernutrition or to zinc status estimated by leukocyte zinc measurements. Mean plasma zinc or leukocyte zinc concentrations in patients did not differ significantly from controls, and only two patients with moderate disease had leukocyte zinc values below the 5th percentile of normal. In another group of nine patients with inflammatory bowel disease of mild-to-moderate severity and minimal nutritional impairment, 65Zn absorption from an extrinsically labeled turkey test meal was 31 +/- 10% compared to 33 +/- 7% in 17 healthy controls, P greater than 0.1. Thus, impairment in 65ZnCl2 absorption in the patients selected for this study was only evident in undernourished persons with moderate or severe disease activity, but biochemical evidence of zinc deficiency was uncommon, and clinical features of zinc depletion were not encountered.


Subject(s)
Chlorides , Colitis, Ulcerative/metabolism , Crohn Disease/metabolism , Intestinal Absorption , Zinc Compounds , Zinc/metabolism , Adult , Aged , Colitis, Ulcerative/drug therapy , Crohn Disease/drug therapy , Drug Therapy, Combination , Female , Food , Humans , Leukocytes/metabolism , Male , Middle Aged , Nutritional Physiological Phenomena , Prednisone/therapeutic use , Sulfasalazine/therapeutic use , Zinc/blood , Zinc Radioisotopes
3.
Ann Thorac Surg ; 40(4): 330-6, 1985 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2413809

ABSTRACT

Of 89 patients diagnosed between 1973 and 1983 as having at least 3 cm of columnar-lined esophagus, 22 were found to have adenocarcinoma. There was no difference in sex ratio, smoking, or the use of alcohol between the benign and adenocarcinoma groups. The patients with adenocarcinoma were older (63 years versus 57 years) and had a higher frequency of dysphagia (64% versus 46%), gastrointestinal bleeding (36% versus 24%), extended columnar-lined esophagus (94% versus 28%), and epithelial dysplasia (68% versus 10%). Heartburn was less frequent in the adenocarcinoma group (59% versus 79%), but when it occurred, it was of longer duration (mean, 18.8 years versus 10.9 years). In 2 patients, progression from benign columnar-lined esophagus to early adenocarcinoma was observed. Of the patients with adenocarcinoma, 2 received palliative treatment without resection and died four and nine months later. Six underwent partial esophagogastrectomy with 1 postoperative death. Four had residual columnar-lined esophagus at the resection margins. In one of them, stricture developed and in one, anastomotic recurrence of adenocarcinoma; 1-year survival was 50%. Fourteen patients underwent total thoracic esophagectomy with no operative deaths, strictures, or anastomotic recurrences; 1-year survival was 5 of 6. Surgical staging revealed that 63% had transmural spread and 55%, lymph node involvement.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Subject(s)
Adenocarcinoma/complications , Barrett Esophagus/complications , Esophageal Diseases/complications , Esophageal Neoplasms/complications , Palliative Care , Adenocarcinoma/mortality , Adenocarcinoma/surgery , Adult , Aged , Esophageal Neoplasms/mortality , Esophageal Neoplasms/surgery , Esophagus/surgery , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Risk
4.
Gastroenterology ; 83(5): 1017-25, 1982 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7117783

ABSTRACT

The mechanisms underlying the abnormal glucose tolerance in patients who had undergone vagotomy and pyloroplasty were investigated by measuring the rates of absorption of ingested glucose and the clearance rate of glucose using tracer methods. These methods are based on labeling a 100-g oral glucose load with [1-14C]glucose and measuring glucose clearance using plasma levels of infused [3-3H]glucose. The rate of appearance of both ingested and total glucose is then calculated continuously using a two-compartment model of glucose kinetics. It was found that about 30% of the ingested glucose (100 g) failed to appear in the systemic circulation. That this was due to malabsorption was confirmed using breath-hydrogen analysis. The absorption period is short (101 +/- 11 min) compared with normal values but the clearance of glucose is identical to that in control subjects, and it peaks 132 +/- 7 min after glucose loading. The peak plasma insulin values were more than four times higher in patients than in normal subjects, and this may afford an explanation of rates of glucose clearance that are inappropriate for the short absorption period. The combination of glucose malabsorption and this clearance pattern could yield the hypoglycemia that may be observed in patients after gastric surgery.


Subject(s)
Glucose/metabolism , Malabsorption Syndromes/metabolism , Pylorus/surgery , Vagotomy , Blood Glucose/metabolism , Carbon Radioisotopes , Female , Gastric Emptying , Humans , Hypoglycemia/metabolism , Intestinal Absorption , Male , Postoperative Complications/metabolism , Tritium
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