Symptom-histopathology relation in upper GI endoscopy

The purpose of this article is to examine the correlation between information obtained from patients before endoscopy and histopathological findings. One thousand, five hundred and thirty-six patients underwent upper GI endoscopy between January 2011-September 2012, without distinction of age and se...

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Published inTurkish journal of surgery Vol. 29; no. 3; pp. 115 - 118
Main Authors Günay, Emre, Özkan, Erkan, Odabaşı, Hacı Mehmet, Abuoğlu, Hacı Hasan, Eriş, Cengiz, Yıldız, Mehmet Kamil, Atalay, Süleyman
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Turkey Turkish Surgical Association 01.09.2013
Turkish Journal of Surgery
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Summary:The purpose of this article is to examine the correlation between information obtained from patients before endoscopy and histopathological findings. One thousand, five hundred and thirty-six patients underwent upper GI endoscopy between January 2011-September 2012, without distinction of age and sex were included in the study. Patients with alarm symptoms, dyspepsia, epigastric pain, gastroesophageal reflux were recorded. Tissue samples taken for histopathological examination and H. pylori screening were evaluated by Giemsa stain. The information given by the patients and histopathological findings were comparatively evaluated. Six hundred and twenty-four patients (40.6%) were male and 912 (59.4%) were female. Mean age was 45 years (18-90). H. pylori was positive in 416 patients with dyspepsia (58.8%), 172 patients with epigastric pain (54.4%), 52 patients with GER symptoms (28.3%) and 128 patients with alarm symptoms (50.8%). Four patients with dyspepsia (0.6%) and 20 patients with alarm symptoms (7.9%) were diagnosed with stomach cancer. The main factor should be considered as the presence of at least one of the alarm symptoms when planning an upper GI endoscopy in a patient. In the presence of at least one of the alarm symptoms, an upper GI endoscopy should be performed regardless of age. Under the age of 50 and for patients without alarm symptoms, medical treatment can be tried before performing upper GI endoscopy. Patients with GER symptoms but not diagnosed as reflux esophagitis, should be treated long-term even when symptoms decline with initial treatment.
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ISSN:1300-0705
2564-6850
1308-8521
2564-7032
DOI:10.5152/UCD.2013.2157