GERD Flashcards
1
Q
GERD
A
A disorder of the LES; bile, pancreatic enzymes, and stomach acid refluxes into the esophagus
2
Q
Clinical manifestations
A
ESOPHAGEAL symptoms:
- Pyrosis
- Regurgitation
- Dysphagia
- Odynophagia (painful swallowing)
- N/
EXTRA-ESOPHAGEAL symptoms (reflux affects structures other than the esophagus and stomach):
- Chronic cough
- Chest pain
- Laryngitis
- Asthma/SOB/pneumonia/bronchitis
- Pharyngitis
- Sinusitis
- Sleep apnea
- Erosion of dental enamel
- Otitis media
3
Q
Complications of GERD
A
Complications:
1. Reflux esophagitis – erosion of esophagus resulting in ulcers near stomach-esophageal junction
- Esophageal strictures – narrowing of esophagus caused from reflux-induced inflammation and scarring
- Barret’s esophagus – intestinal metaplasia (precancerous lesion of the esophagus)
- Esophageal adenocarcinoma
4
Q
Risk factors:
A
GERD risk factors:
1. Genetics (single most important cause)
- Hiatal hernia (80%) – increases GERD due to mechanical and motility factors
- Obesity – high BMI is related to increased risk of GERD
- Zollinger’s (rare) – increased gastric acid secretion due to gastrin production
- Hypercalcemia – increased gastrin production (and acidity)
- Scleroderma and systemic sclerosis – causes esophageal dysfunction
- Meds. – NSAIDs (can lead to pyrosis)
5
Q
Diagnosis
A
- Esophageal pH monitoring – Wireless capsule inserted into esophagus (gold standard)
- Esophageal manometry or esophageal motility study (EMS) – assess motor function of UES and LES; Catheter is inserted into nose to stomach, and is slowly withdrawn, detecting pressure changes (no sedation, ~45 min.)
- EGD and barium swallow
6
Q
Medical management
A
- Lifestyle modification – exercise, diet
- Medication – PPI & H2 receptor blockers = Reduce gastric acid secretion; Sucralfate = heal and prevent further damage of esophagus, but also prevents absorption of other drugs
- Surgery – Nissen fundoplication (laparoscopically tighten the LES) and Linx (magnetized beads assist the LES)
7
Q
Nursing management
A
- Assess symptoms – especially related to timing of pain
- Role in pt education
- Consult dietician
- Encourage daily journal – what they ate?/length of meal time?/pain when eating?/alleviating factors?/OTC meds?
8
Q
Pt education
A
Promote:
1. Lifestyle modifications to lose weight
- Raise HOB 6 inches
- Avoid foods that worsen symptoms – coffee, chocolate, ETOH, peppermint, fatty foods
- Monitor for other symptoms (extraesophageal) – teeth enamel, recurrent otitis media
- Smoking cessation
- Several meals throughout day
- Avoid lying down after eating
- When to contact PCP – symptoms persists, cannot relieve symptoms
- Contact PCP immediately – trouble swallowing, food “stuck” when swallowing, lose weight, chest pain, choking, hematemesis, bloody stool
9
Q
Care coordination
A
- Dietary – note food journal, devise diet with several small meals
- Pharmacy (monitor drug interaction) – Long-term PPI use (dementia due to decreased Ca2+ intake), Sulfacrate (prevents drug absorption), and devise drug plan