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Esophageal motility abnormalities in Egyptian patients using high resolution esophageal manometry: a descriptive study

Journal

EGYPTIAN JOURNAL OF INTERNAL MEDICINE
Volume 34, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1186/s43162-021-00097-2

Keywords

Manometry; Motility; Esophageal topography; Achalasia

Funding

  1. None.

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This study is the first descriptive study to determine the prevalence of esophageal motility abnormalities in Egyptian patients complaining of upper GI symptoms. The results showed that high-resolution manometry is very important for patients with upper GI symptoms.
Background and aimFor many years, esophageal manometry has been used for assessment of upper gastro-intestinal (GI) symptoms. Chicago classification is the key for diagnosis and managing motility disorders as it is considered as a standardized approach for categorization of esophageal abnormalities. The aim of this study is to analyze types of esophageal motility findings in Egyptian cases who were suffering from upper GI complaints. Methods: This descriptive study included 378 subjects who were suffering from upper GI complaints as dysphagia, vomiting, chest pain and regurgitation in the period between 10/2015-7/2020. Esophageal HRM study was performed for all patients (MMS Laborie device). The catheter was positioned and confirmed passing across the EGJ (esophago-gastric junction) using landmarks. Swallows and resting status were recorded. Anatomical landmarks were placed.ResultsMost of the patients were complaining of upper GI symptoms. Males were 49.2% of cases. Mean age was 41.3. Dysphagia was the prominent symptom while chest pain was the least symptom. Many manometry findings were observed including ineffective motility, achalasia, absent contractility, EGJ outflow obstruction, jackhammer esophagus and normal findings. Type II achalasia was the dominant type in achalasia patients while Type III was the least. LES was normotensive in most of the cases. Hiatus hernia (HH) was detected in 40.2% of the cases.ConclusionThis is considered the first Egyptian descriptive study to determine the prevalence of esophageal motility abnormalities in Egyptian patients complaining of upper GI symptoms. HRM is very important for patients complaining of upper GI symptoms.

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