Gаstrоesоphаgeаl Reflux Disease (GERD) 1. Backgrоund Anatomy: The lower esophageal sphincter (LES) forms a high-pressure barrier between the esophagus and stomach. Supportive structures include the diaphragmatic crura and angle of His, which help prevent reflux. Pathophysiology: GERD results from transient LES relaxation or incompetence, allowing gastric acid and pepsin to reflux into the esophagus. Chronic exposure leads to mucosal inflammation, erosive esophagitis, stricture, or Barrett’s esophagus. Epidemiology: Prevalence approaches 20% of adults in Western countries; incidence increases with age, obesity, and pregnancy. Genetics: Familial clustering observed; multifactorial inheritance related to obesity, hiatal hernia, and visceral adiposity. Common associated conditions: Hiatal hernia, delayed gastric emptying, scleroderma, obesity, pregnancy, and medications reducing LES tone. 2. History Typical symptoms: Heartburn (pyrosis), regurgitation, sour or bitter taste, symptoms worse after meals or lying down, improved by antacids. Atypical manifestations: Chronic cough, laryngitis, asthma exacerbation, noncardiac chest pain, or dental enamel erosion. Risk factors: Obesity, pregnancy, hiatal hernia Smoking, alcohol, caffeine, chocolate, peppermint, fatty meals Medications: calcium channel blockers, nitrates, anticholinergics, theophylline, estrogen, progesterone Connective tissue disease (scleroderma) 3. Exam Findings Uncomplicated GERD: Often normal physical exam. Possible findings: Mild epigastric tenderness Pharyngeal erythema or dental enamel loss (extra-esophageal reflux) Weight loss, anemia, or heme-positive stool suggesting complications such as Barrett’s, ulceration, or malignancy. 4. Making the Diagnosis Gold standard: 24-hour ambulatory esophageal pH monitoring (with or without impedance) is the gold standard for confirming abnormal acid exposure. However, this test is not routinely required in typical presentations; it is reserved for: Persistent or atypical symptoms despite PPI therapy Diagnostic uncertainty Preoperative evaluation before antireflux surgery Typical clinical approach: Empiric PPI trial for 4–8 weeks serves as both diagnostic and therapeutic in patients with classic symptoms and no alarm features. Endoscopy (EGD): Indicated for alarm symptoms (dysphagia, odynophagia, weight loss, GI bleeding, anemia, vomiting), failure of empiric therapy, or long-standing GERD (>5 years) to evaluate for Barrett’s esophagus. Esophageal manometry: Used when motility disorders such as achalasia are suspected or before surgical intervention. Imaging: Barium swallow may demonstrate reflux or hiatal hernia but is not diagnostic. 5. Management A. Lifestyle Modifications Weight loss in overweight/obese patients (most effective non-drug intervention). Elevate head of bed 6–8 inches, avoid lying down within 3 hours after meals (best for reducing reflux). Avoid dietary triggers (fatty/spicy foods, chocolate, caffeine, alcohol, and reducing acidity). Stop smoking and limit alcohol. Smaller, more frequent meals; avoid late-night eating (effective for reducing reflux). Review and adjust medications that lower LES tone when feasible. B. Medication Therapy Step-up approach: Begin with H2 receptor antagonist → escalate to PPI if persistent symptoms. Step-down approach: Start with PPI, then taper to lowest effective dose. PPIs (omeprazole, esomeprazole, pantoprazole): First-line for frequent or erosive GERD; initial course 4–8 weeks. H2 receptor antagonists (famotidine): For mild or intermittent symptoms. Antacids/alginates: Immediate symptomatic relief; short-acting. Prokinetics (metoclopramide): Consider only for documented motility disorder; limited use due to adverse effects. C. Procedures and Surgery Indications: Refractory GERD, medication intolerance, or complications (e.g., severe regurgitation, Barrett’s with dysplasia). Nissen fundoplication: Standard surgical correction—tightens LES by wrapping gastric fundus. LINX magnetic sphincter augmentation: Minimally invasive alternative using magnetic beads to reinforce LES tone. Endoscopic therapies: Radiofrequency ablation or plication; less common and variable in long-term success. Question A 42-year-old woman reports a 6-month history of heartburn and regurgitation that occur several times per week, especially after large meals or when lying down. She takes no regular medications. Physical examination is normal. Which of the following lifestyle modifications is most likely to provide the greatest improvement in her symptoms?
A nurse is cаring fоr а pаtient diagnоsed with nephrоtic syndrome. After implementing the prescribed treatment plan, which findings would indicate that the patient’s condition is improving?
The nurse is mоnitоring а client in septic shоck. The client begins bleeding from previous venipuncture sites, in the indwelling cаtheter, аnd rectum. The nurse also observes multiple areas of ecchymosis. What does the nurse suspect has developed in this client?