Gastro-oesophageal reflux disease (GORD) Flashcards

1
Q

What is GORD

A

Reflux of acid into the oesophagus which damages the squamous epithelial lining

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2
Q

Is GORD common

A

Very common

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3
Q

What does GORD stand for

A

Gastro-oesophageal reflux disease

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4
Q

What are the symptoms of GORD

A

Heartburn

Cough

Waterbrash

Sleep disturbance

Nocturnal asthma

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5
Q

What is it important to remember about the presenting symptoms for GORD

A

There might not be any!

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6
Q

Is GORD more common in males or females

A

Males

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7
Q

What investigations are carried out for GORD

A

GORD can usually be diagnosed on the basis of the characteristic symptoms

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8
Q

What should you do if the patient has ALARM symptoms

A

Do an endoscopy

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9
Q

What are the alarm symptoms for GORD

A

Dysphagia

Odynophagia

Weight loss

Gastrointestinal bleeding

Anemia

>55 years

raised platelet

low haemoglobin

upper abdo pain

treatment resistant

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10
Q

What abnormal anatomy feature causes GORD

A

A Hiatus hernia

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11
Q

What is a hiatus hernia

A

Hiatal hernia occurs when the upper part of your stomach bulges through the large muscle separating your abdomen and chest (diaphragm).

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12
Q

What can cause GORD in people with normal anatomy

A

Increased transient relaxations of the LOS

Decreased oesophageal clearance

Decreased tissue resistance to acid/bile

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13
Q

What are complications associated with GORD

A

Ulceration

Stricture

Glandular metaplasia (barretts)

Carcinoma

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14
Q

What is glandular metaplasia of the oesophagus also called

A

Barretts oesophagus

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15
Q

What are treatment options of GORD

A

Lifestyle measures

Pharmacological

Anti reflux surgery

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16
Q

What pharmacological options can treat GORD

A

PPI

Ranatidine

Gaviscon/Rennies

17
Q

What is Barretts Oesophagus

A

The Metaplasia of the normal squamous epithelium of the lower oesophagus to Columnar (glandular) epithelium found in the duodenum

18
Q

What causes Barretts Oesophagus

A

Prolonged acid exposure for about 3 years

19
Q

What do the new columnar cells in barretts oesophagus secrete

A

Mucous

20
Q

What investigation is used for Barretts oesophagus

A

Endoscopy

21
Q

What treatment is used for Barretts Oesophagus

A

Endoscopic mucosal resection (EMR)

Radio frequency ablation (RFA)

22
Q

What are the two types of hiatus hernia

A

Rolling Sliding

23
Q

What happens in a sliding hiatus hernia

A

Sliding hiatal hernias are those in which the junction of the esophagus and stomach, referred to as the gastro- esophageal junction, and part of the stomach protrude into the chest. The junction may reside permanently in the chest, but often it juts into the chest only during a swallow.

24
Q

What happens in a rolling hiatus hernia

A

A para-oesophageal or rolling hiatus hernia is a true herniation of the stomach into a peritoneal sac in the mediastinum. occurs when a defect in the phreno- oesophageal membrane allows a peritoneal sac to protrude alongside the oesophagus through the hiatus.

25
Q

What epithelium type normally resides in the stomach

A

simple columnar epithelium

26
Q

If the oesophagus is damaged by GORD what function gets affected

A

Oesophageal motility impaired Fibrosis can cause stricture and hence obstruction

27
Q

What is Odynophagia

A

Pain when swallowing

28
Q

What is dysphagia

A

Difficultly swallowing