Disease | esophagitis |
Phenotype | C0019291|hiatal hernia |
Sentences | 7 |
PubMedID- 22648098 | Most patients (95 %) had small-sized (1–2 cm, n = 25) and some had medium-sized (3–5 cm, n = 11) hiatal hernia, and 39 % of patients had esophagitis (table 1). |
PubMedID- 24910760 | He had a macroscopically negative upper gastro-intestinal endoscopy; but esophageal biopsy revealed reflux esophagitis, with no hiatal hernia. |
PubMedID- 25048181 | Endoscopic assessment of reflux esophagitis concurrent with hiatal hernia in male japanese patients with obstructive sleep apnea. |
PubMedID- 24348528 | 22 patients had conditions that predisposed for foodimpaction: hiatal hernia with esophagitis (n = 10), esophageal stenosis (n = 4), neurological disease (n = 4), schatzkiring (n = 2), achalasia (n = 1), and eosinophil esophagitis (n = 1). |
PubMedID- 21229366 | Conclusions: lifestyle factors including heavy alcohol consumption, heavy smoking, metabolic disorders, and hiatal hernia increased the risk of erosive esophagitis, but central obesity did not. |
PubMedID- 24027606 | Exclusion criteria were a severe grade active esophagitis, voluminous hiatal hernia (>5 cm), active phase gastric ulcer and/or duodenal ulcers, previous restrictive surgery of the gastrointestinal tract, crohn’s disease, cancers, esophageal-gastro-duodenal hemorrhages in course or potential bleeding esophageal-gastric lesions, treatment with nsaids or anticoagulants, patients with psychiatric disorders or patients who are uncooperative, alcohol or drug-dependent patients, type i diabetes, type ii diabetes in treatment with sulfonylurea, patients with liver, kidney or multi-organ failure. |
PubMedID- 23826462 | Besides that the patient had a sliding hiatal hernia with esophagitis la class c. computed tomography (ct) study of the chest revealed a low-density tissue absorption submucosal lesion measured 40×67 mm and covered by normal mucosa of the lower third of the thoracic esophagus (figure 2a, 2b). |
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