| Literature DB >> 29070010 |
Clive H Wilder-Smith1,2, Andrea Materna3, Lukas Martig4, Adrian Lussi5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Approximately 60% of patients presenting to dentists with erosive tooth wear have significant gastroesophageal reflux (GERD), despite minor reflux symptoms. No longitudinal studies of reflux-associated erosive tooth wear and of reflux characteristics have been reported to date. The aim of this study was to characterize the longitudinal course of GERD and of associated erosive tooth wear, as well as factors predictive of its progression, in a large group of patients.Entities:
Keywords: Dental erosion; Esomeprazole; GERD; Gastroesophageal reflux; Proton pump inhibitor; pH-impedance
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29070010 PMCID: PMC5657057 DOI: 10.1186/s12876-017-0670-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Gastroenterol ISSN: 1471-230X Impact factor: 3.067
Fig. 1Typical high-resolution photographs of dental erosions secondary to gastroesophageal reflux. a Oral (BEWE 3). b Occlusal (BEWE 3). BEWE = basal erosive wear examination [7]
Baseline characteristics of 72 patients presenting with dental erosion and treated with esomeprazole 20 mg twice-daily
| Gender: male/female (n) | 52 / 20 |
| Age: years# | 33.8 (29.1–38.5) |
| Patients with GERD symptoms >2 per week (n) | 15 |
| Reflux Disease Questionnaire score+ | 3 (1–5) |
| Patients previously using PPI regularly (n) | 0 |
| Patients with endoscopic hiatal hernia (n) | 12 |
| BEWE score+ | 14 (11–17) |
| Median follow-up time+ | 1 (1–1) |
BEWE Basic erosive wear examination [7]. (9–13 medium, >13 extensive erosive disease), GERD gastrooesophageal reflux disease, PPI proton pump inhibitor. #means (95% confidence intervals) + median (interquartile range)
Twenty-four-hour ambulatory multichannel pH-impedance measurement results and BEWE scores at baseline and at follow-up off-PPI in patients with progression or no progression of dental erosion after a median of 1 year treatment with esomeprazole 20 mg twice-daily. Means and 95% confidence intervals are shown
| At baseline | At follow-up | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| All patients N = 72 | All patients | No erosion progression | Erosion progression | |
| % time with pH < 4a | 16.5 (12.6–20.4) | 11.7 (5.7–17.7) | 10.2 (6.7–13.7) | 16.9 (6.4–27.4) |
| % time with pH < 5.5a | 43.5 (33.3–53.7) | 40.2 (31.1–49.3) | 40.5 (26.6–54.4) | 37.7 (26.6–48.8) |
| DeMeester scorea | 56.4 (43.2–69.6) | 46.3 (34.3–54.3) | 41.7 (31.8–51.6) | 69.1 (40.1–98.1) |
| Number of all reflux episodes (pH < 7)b | 85 (64–106) | 52 (41–63)* | 53 (46–61)** | 52 (33–71) |
| Number of acidic reflux episodes (pH < 4)b | 54 (41–67) | 41 (31–50) | 43 (37–49) | 33 (24–42) |
| Number of weakly acidic reflux episodes (pH > 4–pH < 7)b | 31 (24–38) | 12 (8–18)** | 10 (8–12)** | 19 (10–28) |
| % proximal reflux (15 cm above lower oesophageal sphincter)a | 26 (20–32) | 23 (17–29) | 23 (19–27) | 21 (15–27) |
| BEWE scoresb | 12 (11–16) | 13 (12–15) | 12 (11–13) | 14 (13–16)*** |
BEWE Basic erosive wear examination (9–13 medium, >13 extensive erosive disease) [7]
ameans (95% confidence intervals)
bmedian (interquartile range)
*p < 0.05 versus baseline **p < 0.01 versus baseline ***p < 0.01 group with erosion progression vs group without erosion progression