Literature DB >> 24499444

Endoscopic findings in uninvestigated dyspepsia.

Jacob Jehuda Faintuch1, Fernando Marcuz Silva, Tomás Navarro-Rodriguez, Ricardo Correa Barbuti, Claudio Lyoiti Hashimoto, Alessandra Rita Asayama Lopes Rossini, Marcio Augusto Diniz, Jaime Natan Eisig.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: It is important to know the causes of dyspepsia to establish the therapeutic approach. Dyspepsia is a frequent syndrome in our country, where there are restrictions to endoscopy and high prevalence of Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) infection. This study aimed to assess the endoscopic findings of the syndrome, in an outpatient screening clinic of a tertiary hospital in São Paulo.
METHODS: Outpatients with uninvestigated dyspepsia, according to Rome III criteria, answered a dyspepsia questionnaire and underwent esophagogastroduodenoscopy. The Rapid Urease Test was applied to fragments of the antral mucosa and epidemiological data were collected from the studied population. Organic dyspepsia findings were analyzed with different variables to verify statistically significant associations.
RESULTS: Three hundred and six patients were included and 282 were analyzed in the study. The mean age was 44 years and women comprised 65% of the sample. Forty-five percent of the patients reported alarm symptoms. Functional dyspepsia was found in 66% of the patients (20% with normal endoscopy results and 46% with gastritis), 18% had GERD and 13% had ulcers (duodenal in 9% and gastric in 4%). Four cases of gastric adenocarcinoma were identified (1.4%), one without alarm characteristics, 1 case of adenocarcinoma of the distal esophagus and 1 case of gastric lymphoma. The prevalence of H. pylori was 54% and infection, age and smoking status were associated with organic dyspepsia. The age of 48 years was indicative of alarm signs.
CONCLUSIONS: The endoscopic diagnosis of uninvestigated dyspepsia in our setting showed a predominance of functional disease, whereas cancer was an uncommon finding, despite the high prevalence of H. pylori. Organic dyspepsia was associated with infection, age and smoking status.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2014        PMID: 24499444      PMCID: PMC3938027          DOI: 10.1186/1471-230X-14-19

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  BMC Gastroenterol        ISSN: 1471-230X            Impact factor:   3.067


Background

Dyspepsia is a prevalent complaint in general practice and gastrointestinal clinics [1-5], with a prevalence of up to 40% among adults in Brazil [6]. Dyspepsia represents up to 8.3% of all primary care physician visits and causes huge economic costs to patients and to the economy [7]. Rome III guideline states that dyspepsia is non-reflux predominant pain or discomfort in the upper abdomen and the patients must also have one or more of the following four symptoms: postprandial fullness, early satiation, epigastralgia and epigastric burning. Symptom onset must have occurred at least six months prior to diagnosis [8]. Only 75% of the dyspepsia experts, 73% of gastroenterologists and 59% of primary care providers adhere to dyspepsia best practices; so “dyspepsia” means different things to different providers. Without a common diagnostic language, general practitioners may be unable to provide adequate treatment following common dyspepsia guidelines. [9]. The rapid introduction of new diagnostic criteria for dyspepsia has made very difficult or virtually impossible to compare prevalence rates from different periods or geographic regions [10]. Because structural upper gastrointestinal (UGI) tract diseases, such as peptic ulcer, erosive esophagitis, luminal strictures and malignancy can course with dyspepsia, esophagogastroduodenoscopy (EGD) is the diagnostic procedure of choice to differentiate patients with organic from those with functional dyspepsia [11]. Although it is possible to propose endoscopy as the initial strategy for dyspepsia [12], the establishment of this procedure for every dyspeptic patient may not be practical approach, as the high prevalence of the syndrome will result in very high costs to any health system [13]. Moreover, the diagnostic procedure and its cost effectiveness must be considering that a large number of uninvestigated dyspepsia are functional cases [14]. Thus, the use of endoscopy in the management of uninvestigated dyspepsia remains a controversial issue worldwide [11]. The frequency of uninvestigated dyspepsia varies considerably in different populations and such differences may be related to true differences in the frequency of the condition or the criteria used to diagnose dyspepsia [15]. International medical practice and academic associations have recommended using alarm signs with or without age limits, usually set at 50–55 years, to select dyspeptic patients for endoscopy [16]. The predictive values to be used in the diagnosis of upper gastrointestinal pathology have been extensively studied, but the results are inconsistent, especially because the majority of previous studies were carried out in Europe or North America [16-18]. As for our country, the very high prevalence of H. pylori infection [19-22], which requires a complex and expensive treatment for a large number of individuals and the low availability of noninvasive tests for the diagnosis of H. pylori infection make the test and treat approach unfeasible. The age indication for endoscopy has not been determined in our country and the limited availability of this procedure does not allow it to be requested as the initial approach. By prospectively following consecutive patients with uninvestigated dyspepsia in an outpatient screening clinic from a tertiary hospital, this study aimed to assess the diagnostic effectiveness of EGD, in a developing country.

Methods

Study patients and setting

This prospective observational study was carried out in a tertiary hospital, which provides open-access service to endoscopy. From September 2008 and September 2011, consecutive adult outpatients who presented with uninvestigated dyspepsia were screened for eligibility. All study participants were systematically evaluated before undergoing endoscopy. The patients were interviewed to determine the presence of alarm symptoms, including unintended weight loss (defined as decrease of more than 5% of original body weight in three months), symptoms suggestive of upper gastrointestinal bleeding and dysphagia. Older age, presence of mass or lymphadenopathy and family history of upper gastrointestinal cancer were not included as alarm characteristics. Symptom intensity was determinate by the Leeds Dyspepsia Questionnaire [23] and epigastralgia was considered typical when pain was relieved by food or acid suppression or clocking was present. The present study was carried out by only two physicians, who made the interviews in person with the outpatients using a standardized questionnaire. The upper digestive endoscopy was carried out with a standard electronic videoendoscope by two experienced endoscopists, no later than 20 days after the interview, to allow time for the symptomatic use of antacids. H. pylori determination was performed by the Rapid Urease Test, validated in our country [24].

Inclusion criteria

Epigastralgia or epigastric burning lasting for at least three months, with symptom onset having occurred at least six months before, at least once a week and/or at post-prandial fullness or early satiation, for three months, with symptom onset that started at least six months before, at least once a week. Patients should be younger than 90 and older than 13 years old.

Exclusion criteria

Exclusion criteria included predominant symptoms of gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD), symptoms outside the epigastrium, other predominant dysmotility symptoms (nausea and vomiting), use of NSAIDs (including low dose treatment) up to one week before study inclusion, use of proton pump inhibitors or H2-blockers for more than two weeks, before study enrollment, presence of systemic decompensated disease (congestive heart failure, coronary heart disease, liver failure, diabetes mellitus, thyroid disease, acute or chronic respiratory failure, hematological diseases), presence of major psychiatric disorders, impediment to endoscopy and difficulty for the patient to understand the aims and procedures of the study.

Ethics

This study was approved by the Ethics Committee for Analysis of Research Projects - CAPPesq - Clinical Direction of the Hospital and the Faculty of Medicine, University of São Paulo. Written informed consent was obtained from the patients prior to study participation.

Statistical analysis

Variables were measured as frequency and percentage and the association between organic dyspeptic findings and the variables was determined by Fisher’s test, with a p value < 0.05 being considered statistically significant. A cutoff for age was obtained though ROC curve. Organic dyspeptic findings were analyzed with the variables by simple and multiple binary logistic regressions then odd ratios and its 95% confidence intervals were presented. A score for endoscopy indication was determined based on regression coefficient values. Calculations were performed using R (The R Foundation for Statistical Computing), version 2.15.2.

Results

Three hundred six patients were included, of which 282 were available for analysis: 8 patients dropped from the study, 5 were excluded, as they were using of omeprazole at the time of the endoscopy, 4 had their endoscopy results lost, 3 refused to undergo endoscopy, 3 underwent the endoscopy after more than 30 days and one had a previous abdominal surgery. Patient demographic data are shown in Table  1 and symptoms are listed in Table  2.
Table 1

Demographic informations of patients studied

Patients included
306
Endoscopies performed
282 (92%)
Positive H. pylori
144 (54%)
Age-mean years
44
  Range
16 – 87
  Age > 48
121 (42%)
Male gender
98 (35%)
Race- white
203 (72%)
Born in São Paulo
120 (43%)
Smokers45 (16%)
Table 2

Description of the symptoms

Symptoms onset
 
  6 to 11 months
144 (51%)
  1 to 3 years
75 (26%)
  4 to 10 years
35 (12%)
  More than 10 years
28 (10%)
Type of symptoms
 
  Epigastralgia
193 (68%)
  Post-prandial fullness
89 (32%)
Intensity of symptoms
 
  Mild
62 (22%)
  Moderate
125 (44%)
  Severe
94 (33%)
Pain specificity
 
  Tipic
113/192 (59%)
  Atipic
79 (41%)
Alarm symptoms
 
  Weight loss
101 (36%)
  Bleeding
14 (5%)
  Dysphagia11 (4%)
Demographic informations of patients studied Description of the symptoms GERD (18%) and peptic ulcer (13%) were the major causes of organic dyspepsia; there were six cases (2%) of upper gastrointestinal cancer (4 gastric carcinomas, 1 gastric lymphoma and 1 esophageal adenocarcinoma) characterizing a total of 96 (34%) patients as having organic dyspepsia (Table  3). Reflux disease included cases of erosive esophagitis, Barrett’s esophagus and esophageal ulcer. The specific findings on upper digestive endoscopy are summarized in Table  4. Organic dyspepsia (determined by the finding of reflux disease or peptic ulcer or malignancy) showed statistical significance with age, H. pylori positive status and smoking, but not with weight loss, symptom intensity and duration, gender and ethnicity (Table  5).
Table 3

General endoscopic findings

Functional dyspepsia
186 (66%)
  Normal examen
56 (20%)
  Gastritis
130 (46%)
Organic dyspepsia
96 (34%)
  Reflux esophagitis
52 (18%)
  Peptic ulcer
38 (13%)
    Gastric
12 (4%)
    Duodenal
26 (9%)
  Malignancy
6 (2%)
    Gastric adenocarcinoma
4 (1.4%)
    Gastric lymphoma
1 (0.4%)
    Esophageal adenocarcinoma1 (0.4%)
Table 4

Specific endoscopic findings

Esophagus
 
  Non-erosive esophagitis*
8 (3%)
  Erosive esophagitis
47 (16%)
  Barret
2 (0.7%)
  Ulcer
1 (0.4%)
  Others**
10 (4%)
Stomach
 
  Gastritis
186 (61%)
    Enanthematous
66 (23%)
    Erosive
95 (34%)
    Nodular
18 (6%)
    Atrophic
7 (3%)
  Ulcer 14 (5%)
 
    Fundus, body and antrum
9 (3%)
    Prepyloric
5 (2%)
  Malignancy
5 (1.8%)
    Adenocarcinoma
4 (1.4%)
    Lymphoma
1 (0.4%)
    Others
6 (2%)
Duodenum
 
    Duodenitis
31 (11%)
      Enanthematous
9 (3%)
      Erosive
22 (8%)
    Ulcer
6 (9%)
    Others10 (4%)

*Non erosive esophagitis: enanthematous esophagitis: 6 cases, esophageal candidiasis: 2 cases.

**Others esophagus findings: Hiatal hernia: 6 cases, Papillomatosis esophagitis: 2 cases, Esophageal variz: 1 case, Retention cyst: 1 case.

Table 5

Organic dyspepsia in simple binary logistic regression with variables

Variable Group OR 95% CI p Value
Gender
Male
1.54
0.92 – 2.56
0.10
Age
> 48
1.75
1.06 – 2.87
0.03
Smoking
Positive
1.4
1.21 – 4.4
0.01
Weight loss
Positive
0.7
0.42 – 1.18
0.18
Symptom Intensity
Severe
0.56
0.28 – 1.11
0.10
Symptom duration
> 10 years
0.67
0.28 - 1,62
0.37
H. pyloriPositive1.671.06 – 2.870.05
General endoscopic findings Specific endoscopic findings *Non erosive esophagitis: enanthematous esophagitis: 6 cases, esophageal candidiasis: 2 cases. **Others esophagus findings: Hiatal hernia: 6 cases, Papillomatosis esophagitis: 2 cases, Esophageal variz: 1 case, Retention cyst: 1 case. Organic dyspepsia in simple binary logistic regression with variables The age of patients analyzed by ROC curve showed that the age of 48 years had a 0.42 positive and 0.72 negative predictive values for organic dyspepsia (Figure  1), suggesting this age is an alarm characteristic.
Figure 1

Age indication for alarm feature.

Age indication for alarm feature. The coefficients of multiple binary logistic regression of age, treated as a continuous variable, smoking status and positive H. pylori status (Table  6) allowed the construction of a score, where values lower than 46 (in a scale of up to 100 points) indicates the non- necessity of EGD with a high negative predictive value for organic dyspepsia (Figure  2).
Table 6

Organic dyspepsia in multiple binary logistic regression

Variable Group OR 95% CI pValue
Age
> 48
1.92
1.13 – 3.25
0.02
Smocking
Positive
2.36
1.19 – 4.69
0.01
H. pyloriPositive1.680.99 – 2.860.05
Figure 2

Upper Digestive Endoscopy (UDE) Score.

Organic dyspepsia in multiple binary logistic regression Upper Digestive Endoscopy (UDE) Score.

Discussion

Our study shows results that are consistent with the meta-analysis by Ford [14], although (considering the Rome criteria) our prevalence of GERD was somewhat higher than that of peptic ulcer, whereas malignancy rates were somewhat higher than those observed in that study. These differences may be due to the fact that our institution is an outpatient screening clinic in general practice of a tertiary hospital. In patients followed in a three-year prospective general practice study, the presence of alarm symptoms significantly increased the risk of developing peptic ulcers, but not gastrointestinal cancer. Positive predictive values for development of cancer and ulcer were 4% and 14%, respectively [18]. Patients with peptic ulcer were more likely to present with gastrointestinal bleeding [25] and in our study, gastrointestinal bleeding was an uncommon alarm symptom (5%), whereas the prevalence of peptic ulcer was 13% and malignancy, 2%. It was somewhat surprising that more than two fifths of our functional dyspeptic patients had alarm symptoms, while about 75% of the ulcer patients did not. It is possible that our most frequent alarm symptom (weight loss) was not specific for serious digestive tract diseases. Upper GI bleeding and unintended weight loss were also associated with malignancy [26], but the sensitivity of alarm features in diagnosing upper gastrointestinal malignancy varied from 0% to 100%, while specificity ranged from 16% to 98% [27]. This wide variation in sensitivity may be due to the small number of cancer cases detected in many of the studies. Five in six patients with neoplasms had alarm symptoms, inferring a sensitivity of 83% and specificity of 59%. In a study with unsedated transnasal esophagogastroduodenoscopy, cancer was found in 4% of patients with alarm symptoms (in our study 1.7%) versus 0.1% (in our study 0.6%) in the non-alarm symptom group [27]. Despite the difference between patients with and without alarm symptoms, it is known that symptoms have limited value in the diagnosis of upper gastrointestinal malignancy [28]. In this study, older age, mass or lymphadenopathy and family history of upper gastrointestinal cancer were not included as alarm features. In Brazil there is no consensus on this matter and the AGA guidelines are usually followed [16]. In our sample, all patients with malignancy were older than 55 years, but considering the finding of organic dyspepsia (reflux disease, peptic ulcer and malignancy) our study suggests the age of 48 as indicative of alarm symptom. Frequent vomiting was not considered an alarm symptom, as it was disregarded when reported as a chief complaint in dyspeptic syndrome and thus, it is unlikely that this symptom, when present for at least three months, will not result in weight loss. The presence of adenopathy or abdominal tumor changes the diagnosis of undiagnosed dyspepsia into undiagnosed adenopathy or tumor and in these cases, the best approach requires imaging assessment and not an esophagogastroduodenoscopy. Family history of upper gastrointestinal cancer is a type of information that is difficult to obtain, when patients know the cause of the disease, they cannot provide information on its type and precise location. Primary gastrointestinal lymphoma is a rare disease, although the stomach is the most frequent site of involvement for this neoplasm [29]. Our sample had only 1 case of lymphoma; considering the small sample size of our study, this finding was most likely fortuitous. The prevalence of GERD has increased dramatically in recent decades, mostly in the western world, where it affects about 19% to 30% of the population, increasing the risk for esophageal adenocarcinoma [30]. In this study, GERD was diagnosed in 18% of patients, similar to the findings of a recent meta-analysis, based on Rome criteria [14]. In Denmark, gastric inflammation was recently found in 11% of the patients with upper gastrointestinal symptoms [27]; our study did not include histological examination of the gastric mucosa, and thus, gastritis was an endoscopic diagnosis, which after the exclusion of other concurrent diagnoses showing a prevalence of 46%. The prevalence of H. pylori infection in our population was high (54%) and infected individuals had a 10-fold higher probability of having any gastric mucosa lesions than non-infected individuals [31]. Our finding of 38 patients (13%) with ulcer, 26 of them (9%) with duodenal ulcer, is also consistent with the high prevalence of infection. In 2005, in a study of our hospital, the overall H. pylori prevalence was 53%, assessed in 1478 consecutive endoscopies [32]. We had a similarly high prevalence, indicating that there was no decrease in infection rates during this period. This high prevalence of infection associated with the low availability of non-invasive tests for its detection prevent the use of the proposed approach of test and treat strategy for undiagnosed dyspepsia. H. pylori eradication treatment is always high cost and complex, with limited efficiency of 88% [33]. The number of cases of functional dyspepsia responsive to treatment is low [34], as only 50% of ulcer patients attain symptom resolution [35,36], whereas the symptoms of patients with reflux disease do not improve with treatment [37]. Therefore, the test and treat strategy may not be adequate for developing countries, which usually have very high prevalence of H. pylori infection and low level of resources for health care. Empirical treatment for young patients without alarm signs may be the possible approach for undiagnosed dyspepsia in our country. Our study provides a score, which can be useful in indicating endoscopy for these cases. Further studies should be performed to test this proposal, especially in centers similar to ours.

Conclusions

In Brazil, a developing country with high prevalence of H. pylori infection, the most frequent cause of uninvestigated dyspepsia is functional dyspepsia, whereas gastric cancer is a rare finding. Even after selecting patients according to Rome III criteria, reflux disease predominated over peptic ulcer. The suggested age for the onset of alarm signs is 48 years old and a score that correlates H pylori infection, age and smoking may be useful for the indication of endoscopy as the approach in the presence of dyspepsia.

Competing interests

The authors declare that they have no competing interests.

Authors’ contributions

All authors contributed to the design of the study. Acquisition of data and quality control: JJF, FMS. Analysis and interpretation of data: JJF, FMS, TNR, RCB,MAD, JNE. Endoscopic examinations: CLH, ARALR. Statistical Analysis: MAD. Draft manuscript: JJF. All authors have read and approved the final manuscript.

Pre-publication history

The pre-publication history for this paper can be accessed here: http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-230X/14/19/prepub
  37 in total

1.  Management of Helicobacter pylori infection--the Maastricht IV/ Florence Consensus Report.

Authors:  Peter Malfertheiner; Francis Megraud; Colm A O'Morain; John Atherton; Anthony T R Axon; Franco Bazzoli; Gian Franco Gensini; Javier P Gisbert; David Y Graham; Theodore Rokkas; Emad M El-Omar; Ernst J Kuipers
Journal:  Gut       Date:  2012-05       Impact factor: 23.059

2.  Factors related to Helicobacter pylori prevalence in an adult population in Brazil.

Authors:  Schlioma Zaterka; Jaime N Eisig; Decio Chinzon; Wolfgang Rothstein
Journal:  Helicobacter       Date:  2007-02       Impact factor: 5.753

3.  Clarithromycin-based triple therapy for Helicobacter pylori treatment in peptic ulcer patients.

Authors:  Guilherme Felga; Fernando Marcuz Silva; Ricardo Correa Barbuti; Tomas Navarro-Rodriguez; Schlioma Zaterka; Jaime Natan Eisig
Journal:  J Infect Dev Ctries       Date:  2010-11-24       Impact factor: 0.968

Review 4.  Functional gastroduodenal disorders.

Authors:  Jan Tack; Nicholas J Talley; Michael Camilleri; Gerald Holtmann; Pinjin Hu; Juan-R Malagelada; Vincenzo Stanghellini
Journal:  Gastroenterology       Date:  2006-04       Impact factor: 22.682

5.  Helicobacter pylori reinfection in Brazilian patients with peptic ulcer disease: a 5-year follow-up.

Authors:  Fernando M Silva; Tomas Navarro-Rodriguez; Ricardo C Barbuti; Rejane Mattar; Claudio L Hashimoto; Jaime N Eisig
Journal:  Helicobacter       Date:  2010-02       Impact factor: 5.753

6.  Predictors of long-term outcome of functional dyspepsia and duodenal ulcer after successful Helicobacter pylori eradication--a 7-year follow-up study.

Authors:  Giovanni Maconi; Massimo Sainaghi; Mirko Molteni; Matteo Bosani; Silvano Gallus; Giorgio Ricci; Vittorio Alvisi; Gabriele Bianchi Porro
Journal:  Eur J Gastroenterol Hepatol       Date:  2009-04       Impact factor: 2.566

7.  Empirical H2-blocker therapy or prompt endoscopy in management of dyspepsia.

Authors:  P Bytzer; J M Hansen; O B Schaffalitzky de Muckadell
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  1994-04-02       Impact factor: 79.321

8.  Epidemiology of uninvestigated and functional dyspepsia in Asia: facts and fiction.

Authors:  Uday C Ghoshal; Rajan Singh; Full-Young Chang; Xiaohua Hou; Benjamin Chun Yu Wong; Udom Kachintorn
Journal:  J Neurogastroenterol Motil       Date:  2011-07-13       Impact factor: 4.924

9.  Diagnostic accuracy of age and alarm symptoms for upper GI malignancy in patients with dyspepsia in a GI clinic: a 7-year cross-sectional study.

Authors:  Hooman Khademi; Amir-Reza Radmard; Fatemeh Malekzadeh; Farin Kamangar; Siavosh Nasseri-Moghaddam; Mattias Johansson; Graham Byrnes; Paul Brennan; Reza Malekzadeh
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2012-06-13       Impact factor: 3.240

10.  Prevalence of Helicobacter pylori infection and associated factors among adults in Southern Brazil: a population-based cross-sectional study.

Authors:  Ina S Santos; Jose Boccio; Ari S Santos; Neiva C J Valle; Camila S Halal; Marta Colvara Bachilli; Ricardo D Lopes
Journal:  BMC Public Health       Date:  2005-11-10       Impact factor: 3.295

View more
  10 in total

1.  Dyspepsia-Like Symptoms in Helicobacter pylori-Negative Chronic Gastritis are Associated with ASCA-, ANCA-, and Celiac Seropositivity but Not with Other Autoimmune Parameters: A Single-Centre, Retrospective Cross-Sectional Study.

Authors:  Noémi Zádori; Dávid Németh; Levente Frim; Nóra Vörhendi; Lajos Szakó; Szilárd Váncsa; Péter Hegyi; József Czimmer
Journal:  Int J Gen Med       Date:  2022-10-12

2.  Helicobacter pylori infection in non-ulcer dyspepsia: A cross-sectional study.

Authors:  P K Sharma; S Salaria; M Manrai; S Srivastava; D Kumar; A R Singh
Journal:  Med J Armed Forces India       Date:  2021-02-27

Review 3.  Rare gastrointestinal lymphomas: The endoscopic investigation.

Authors:  Calogero Vetro; Giacomo Bonanno; Giorgio Giulietti; Alessandra Romano; Concetta Conticello; Annalisa Chiarenza; Paolo Spina; Francesco Coppolino; Rosario Cunsolo; Francesco Di Raimondo
Journal:  World J Gastrointest Endosc       Date:  2015-08-10

4.  A Simple Pre-endoscopy Score for Predicting Risk of Malignancy in Patients with Dyspepsia: A 5-Year Prospective Study.

Authors:  Amit Kumar Dutta; Grace Rebekah; Sudipta Dhar Chowdhury; Sajith Kattiparambil Gangadharan; Yuvaraj Subramani; Manoj Kumar Sahu; Reuben Thomas Kurien; Deepu David; Ebby George Simon; Anjilivelil Joseph Joseph; Viswanath Reddy Donapati; Ashok Chacko
Journal:  Dig Dis Sci       Date:  2018-08-14       Impact factor: 3.199

5.  Gastritis - facts and doubts.

Authors:  Jacek Muszyński; Bartłomiej Ziółkowski; Paweł Kotarski; Adam Niegowski; Barbara Górnicka; Magdalena Bogdańska; Agnieszka Ehrmann-Jóśko; Magdalena Zemlak; Beata Młynarczyk-Bonikowska; Jolanta Siemińska
Journal:  Prz Gastroenterol       Date:  2016-09-08

6.  Self-rated health and functional capacity in individuals reporting overlapping symptoms of gastroesophageal reflux disease, functional dyspepsia and irritable bowel syndrome - a population based study.

Authors:  Dorte Ejg Jarbøl; Sanne Rasmussen; Kirubakaran Balasubramaniam; Sandra Elnegaard; Peter Fentz Haastrup
Journal:  BMC Gastroenterol       Date:  2017-05-18       Impact factor: 3.067

7.  Endoscopic yield of chronic dyspepsia in outpatients: A single-center experience in Cambodia.

Authors:  Borathchakra Oung; Khang Chea; Chakravuth Oung; Jean-Christophe Saurin; Cynthia W Ko
Journal:  JGH Open       Date:  2019-06-24

8.  Rome III, Rome IV, and Potential Asia Symptom Criteria for Functional Dyspepsia Do Not Reliably Distinguish Functional From Organic Disease.

Authors:  Zhongcao Wei; Qian Yang; Qi Yang; Juan Yang; Xinxing Tantai; Xin Xing; Cailan Xiao; Yanglin Pan; Na Liu; Jinhai Wang
Journal:  Clin Transl Gastroenterol       Date:  2020-12       Impact factor: 4.396

9.  Validation of the Kinyarwanda-version Short-Form Leeds Dyspepsia Questionnaire and Short-Form Nepean Dyspepsia Index to assess dyspepsia prevalence and quality-of-life impact in Rwanda.

Authors:  Arcade Nkurunziza; Vincent Dusabejambo; Kelly Everhart; Steve Bensen; Tim Walker
Journal:  BMJ Open       Date:  2016-06-06       Impact factor: 2.692

10.  Factors leading to dyspepsia in renal transplant recipients.

Authors:  Aisha Nazeer; Ayesha Aslam Rai; Nasir Hassan Luck
Journal:  Pan Afr Med J       Date:  2017-10-06
  10 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.