Gastroesophageal reflux disease: Difference between revisions

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Revision as of 11:12, 3 November 2016

Background

  • Abbreviation: GERD
  • Affects up to 20% of population
  • Assume chest pain is cardiac origin until proven otherwise

Causes

Clinical Features

Patients who come to the Emergency may present with various symptoms, both typical and atypical.

  • Typical symptoms, may include: heart burn, regurgitation of food or dysphagia.
  • Atypical symptoms include noncardiac chest pain, asthma, pneumonia, hoarseness, and aspiration.
  • Pain and discomfort with or right after meals
    • typically described as burning pain
    • often worse when lying flat
  • Chest pain with features similar to ACS:
    • Exertional, associated with diaphoresis, nausea/vomiting, radiating to arm

Pediatric GERD

  • Reflux is physiologic in infants
  • Pathologic only if it causes complications, such as:
    • failure to thrive/weight loss
    • esophagitis
    • respiratory disease: refractory asthma, recurrent pneumonia, apnea
    • BRUE

Differential Diagnosis

Epigastric Pain

Management

  • Avoid GERD exacerbating agents (ETOH, caffeine, nicotine, chocolate, fatty foods)
  • Sleep with head of bed elevated
  • Avoid eating within 3hr of sleep
  • PPI or H2 blocker
  • Infants: small frequent feeds, avoid semi-supine position (e.g. carseat, carrier) right after feeds
    • medications only if significant complications


Disposition

  • Home (outpatient treatment)

See Also

References