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Published byDora Mason Modified over 9 years ago
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DYSPEPSIA Leena Patel 1/2/12
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OVERVIEW Statistics Red flags Management H-pylori testing and treatment
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STATISTICS 5% of adults/year consult their GP for dyspepsia symptoms 1% will go on to have endoscopy Of these: 80% will have non-ulcer dyspepsia or reflux 13% will have a peptic ulcer <3% will have malignancy
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SYMPTOMS Nausea Vomiting Bloating Belching Epigastric pain Retrosternal pain Early satiety Chronic cough
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ALARM SYMPTOMS Progressive dysphagia Persistent vomiting Progressive unintentional weight loss Iron deficiency anaemia Epigastric mass Chronic GI bleeding Suspicious barium study
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ENDOSCOPY Refer patient of ANY age with ≥1 of the above listed alarm symptoms Refer patients >55 years of age with new onset unexplained dyspepsia which is persistent (4-6 weeks) even without alarm symptoms TRY TO AVOID USING PPI/H2RA FOR 2 WEEKS PRIOR TO ENDOSCOPY
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ENDOSCOPY RESULTS UPPER GI MALIGNANCY PEPTIC ULCER DISEASE (GASTRIC/DUODENAL) NON-ULCER DYSPEPSIA GORD WITH/WITHOUT OESOPHAGITIS
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MANAGEMENT Divided into: Uninvestigated dyspepsia H-pylori eradication GORD, PUD, NUD
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MEDICATION INDUCED NSAIDS Steroids Bisphosphonates Calcium channel blockers Nitrates Theophyllines
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LIFESTYLE Healthy balanced diet Avoid/reduce fatty food, caffeine, chocolate Weight reduction Smoking cessation Reduce alcohol intake Avoid late meals Raise end of bed Try antacids/alginate therapy for intermittent symptoms
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UNINVESTIGATED DYSPEPSIA H-pylori testing and treat with eradication/PPI OR Treat with high dose PPI for 1 month and then test for H-Pylori if still symptomatic NICE suggests either way is acceptable Both treatments equally effective and cost effective (BMJ 2008) Advises treat and test if still symptomatic
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H-Pylori TESTING Carbon 13 urea breath test, stool antigen and serology Serology is less accurate but can be done whilst on a PPI Breath test and antigen test have similar and high sensitivity and specificity Before either breath/antigen test: Avoid antibiotics for 4 weeks Avoid PPI/H2RA for 2 weeks Patient should fast for 6 HOURS prior to breath test Avoid retesting due to high false positive, breath test if have to
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ERADICATION REGIMES Standard triple therapy Full dose PPI + amoxicillin (1g BD) + clarithromycin (500mg BD) Full dose PPI + metronidazole (400mg BD) + clarithromycin (250mg BD) 7 day treatment 77% effective at eradication Sequential treatment 10 day treatment Full dose PPI Amoxicillin (1g BD) for the first 5d Metronidazole + clarithromycin (500mg BD) for next 5d 93% effective at H-pylori eradication
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UNINVESTIGATED DYSPEPSIA If relapse following successful treatment, consider low dose PPI with regular review If symptoms fail to respond to PPI/eradication treatment, consider a trial of H2 receptor antagonist or prokinetic for 1 month and then review
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GORD, NUD, PUD If peptic ulcer disease or non-ulcer disease on endoscopy, then test for H-Pylori and eradicate if present If GORD, or H-Pylori negative PUD or NUD, then 1-2 month course of PPI, doubling dose of PPI for 1month if not responding Consider 1 month trial of H2RA/prokinetic if still not responding Repeat endoscopy for H-Pylori positive GU.
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Risks of long term PPI treatment Hip fractures and calcium malabsorption Vitamin B12 malabsorption Iron malabsorption Hypomagnesaemia Atrophic gastritis (esp. if H-pylori +ve) ?pneumonia
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Summary Red flags Don’t forget medication induced dyspepsia, consider alternatives Lifestyle advice Regular review of PPI treatment due to potential risks of long term treatment
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