Transcript DYSPEPSIA

DYSPEPSIA
Dr.Vishal Rathore
Dyspepsia
• popularly known as indigestion
• meaning hard or difficult digestion, is a medical condition
characterized by chronic or recurrent pain in the upper
abdomen, upper abdominal fullness and feeling full earlier
than expected when eating.
Prevalence
25-40 %, of which
• 50% self medicate
• 25% consult their G.P.
•
5% of G.P. consultations are for dyspepsia
• Prescribed drugs and endoscopies cost £600M in 2000
• OTC indigestion remedies sold for £100M in 2002
Causes
•
•
•
•
•
Reflux oesophagitis 12%
Duodenal ulcer
10%
Gastric ulcer
6%
Gastric carcinoma 1%
Oesophageal carcinoma 0.5%
Non-erosive GORD
Functional (non-ulcer) dyspepsia
Alarm Symptoms/ Signs*
• GI bleeding (same day referral)
• Persistent vomiting
• Weight loss (progressive unintentional)
• Dysphagia
• Epigastric mass
• Anaemia due to possible GI blood loss
Thus all patients with new-onset dyspepsia should have
abdominal examination and FBC
First Approach to Dyspepsia
• Consider possible causes outside upper GI tract
-Heart, lung, liver, gall bladder, pancreas, bowel
•
Consider drugs and stop if possible
- Aspirin / NSAIDs, calcium antagonists, nitrates,
theophyllines, etidronate, steroids
Refer if dyspepsia in 55+* year old
• Alarm symptoms/signs (2 week referral)
• Unexplained and persistent recent-onset
dyspepsia without alarm symptoms
– Unexplained means no cause known
– Persistent implies present for a length of
time (NICE suggest 4-6 weeks)
– Recent-onset implies new-not a recurrent episode.
Referral for Endoscopy
•
Review medications for possible causes of dyspepsia
(calcium antagonists, nitrates, theophyllines,
bisphosphonates, corticosteroids and non-steroidal
anti-inflammatory drugs [NSAIDs]).
• In patients requiring referral, suspend NSAID use.
Urgent specialist referral
Endoscopic investigation is indicated for patients of any
age with dyspepsia when presenting with any of the
following:
• chronic gastrointestinal bleeding,
• progressive unintentional weight loss,
• progressive difficulty swallowing,
• persistent vomiting,
• Iron deficiency anaemia,
• epigastric mass
• suspicious barium meal
Routine Endoscopic Investigation
• Patients of any age, presenting with dyspepsia and
without alarm signs, is not necessary.
• However, in patients aged 55 years and older with unexplained
and persistent recent-onset dyspepsia alone, an urgent referral
for endoscopy should be made.
Management of simple dyspepsia
in those aged < 55 years
• Stress benign nature of dyspepsia
•
Lifestyle advice
– Healthy eating
– Weight reduction
– Stop smoking
– Use of antacids
Interventions for uninvestigated dyspepsia
• Initial therapeutic strategies for dyspepsia are
empirical treatment with a proton pump inhibitor (PPI) or
testing for and treating H. pylori.
• There is currently insufficient evidence to guide which should
be offered first.
• A 2-week washout period following PPI use is necessary
before testing for H. pylori with a breath test or a stool antigen
test
Nice Guideline Summary
• Refer if “alarm symptoms” at any stage
•
Test and treat
(Test for H. pylori and treat positives)
THEN, IF STILL SYMPTOMATIC
PPI for one month
THEN
Manage recurrent symptoms as functional dyspepsia
Rx of H. Pylori
•



One week triple therapy *
PPI (full dose) e.g. omeprazole 20mg bd
Clarithromycin 500mg bd
Amoxycillin 1g bd
(or Metronidazole 400mg bd)
• Use a carbon-13 urea breath test, stool antigen test or, when
performance has been validated, laboratory based serology.
• If re-testing for H. pylori use a carbon-13 urea breath test.*
THANK YOU !!!!!