GORD
Appearance
Definitions:
[edit | edit source]- GORD: When reflux of stomach contents causes troublesome symptoms and/or complications
- Progressive disease if no intervention
- Real risk of primary and secondary complications
- Refractory GORD: Defined as partial or lack of response to PPI BD
Anatomy:
[edit | edit source]- Defective lower oesophageal sphincter has:
- Pressure <6mm Hg or
- Total length <2cm or
- Abdominal length <1cm
Risk factors
[edit | edit source]- Factors increasing intra-abdominal pressure
- Obesity
- Increased intra-abdominal pressure, decreased LOS pressure, impaired oesophageal body peristalsis, more frequent transient LOS relaxations
- Can often be asymptomatic - 45% of patients getting worked up for bariatric surgery have silent reflux
- Pregnancy
- Oestrogen and progesterone decrease LOS tone
- Gravid uterus
- Obesity
- Factors compromising GOJ
- Smoking
- Hiatus hernia
- Severity correlates with size of hernia
- Impaired crural diaphragmatic component of GOJ, low LOS pressure, reduced threshold for eliciting transient LOS relaxation in response to gastric distension
- Drugs
- Anticholinergics
- Nitrates
- Calcium channel blockers
- Tricyclic antidepressants
- Opioids
- Theophylline
- Diazepam
- Barbiturates
- Factors increasing acidity of gastric secretions
- Lifestyle
- Fat, chocolate, peppermint, caffeine, alcohol
- Zollinger-Ellison syndrome
- Lifestyle
- Other
- Structural
- Mechanical
- Genetic
- H Pylori possibly protective - negative risk factor for reflux - thought to be due to atrophic gastritis
Physiology
[edit | edit source]- Gastric acid production - parietal cells in fundus and body of stomach
- Neurological - vagus stimulates parietal cells through ACh
- Endocrine - gastrin activates parietal cells
- Paracrine - histamine from enterochromaffin-like cells
- Normal mechanisms clearing acid from oesophagus:
- Peristalsis is usually effective in returning fluid to stomach
- Swallowed saliva contains bicarbonate, which can neutralise acid
Pathophysiology
[edit | edit source]- GORD occurs when intra-gastric pressure is greater than high-pressure zone of the distal oesophagus
- Resting LOS pressure is too low (frequently associated with hiatal hernia - displacement of GOJ into the posterior mediastinum)
- Inappropriate relaxation of LOS in the absence of peristaltic contraction of the oesophagus (can occur in normal anatomic position)
- Some degree of GORD is physiological, occurring in the setting of a normal LOS. Allows us to rapidly evacuate swallowed air from the stomach, that would otherwise cause bloating and flatulence.
- Pathological GORD occurs with greater oesophageal acid exposure, worse symptoms, and the presence of mucosal damage of the oesophagus
- Hiatal hernias often associated with GORD - abnormal anatomy compromises the LOS
- See separate topic
Symptoms - oesophageal, extra-oesophageal and complications
[edit | edit source]- Typical symptoms: heartburn, regurgitation, water brash
- Volume reflux which is worse lying down and responds to PPIs
- Heartburn - epigastric or retrosternal caustic or stinging sensation, which does not typically radiate to the back, and is not described as a pressure sensation
- Water brash - sour taste described as either acid or bile
- Regurgitation - generally of digested food. Regurgitation of undigested food suggests oesophageal diverticulum or achalasia.
- Differentiate between pathological and physiological:
- Physiological - short-lived, asymptomatic, post-prandial, not during sleep
- Pathological - often occurs nocturnally. A/w symptoms or mucosal injury
- Atypical symptoms: consider GORD in dysphagia, chest pain, globus, odynophagia, cough/hoarseness/wheeze, sometimes nausea
- Dysphagia occurs with reflux-associated inflammatory processes of the oesophageal wall (Schatzki ring, diffuse distal oesophageal inflammation, peptic stricture - pathognomic for long-standing reflux). Can functionally shorten the oesophagus, making operations harder.
- Extra-oesophageal symptoms:
- Laryngeal - hoarseness/dysphonia, throat clearing, throat pain, globus, choking, post-nasal drip, laryngeal and tracheal stenosis, laryngospasm, contact ulcers.
- Pulmonary - cough, shortness of breath, wheezing, pulmonary disease (asthma)
- Patients with asthma and GORD can see an improvement rate of 90% of children and 70% of adults in their asthma symptoms after anti-reflux surgery
- Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis is possibly caused by GORD in some cases (as many as 94% of patients with IPF have been shown to have GORD)
- Occur due to
- Proximal oesophageal reflux and micro-aspiration of gastroduodenal contents causing direct caustic injury to the larynx and lower respiratory tract
- Distal oesophageal acid exposure triggering a vagal cough/bronchospasm reflux, due to common vagal innervation of trachea and oesophagus
- Variable response to PPI, even if these symptoms are due to GORD
- Need to thoroughly evaluate these patients for other causes (?ENT/resp referral). If no other cause found, Sabiston says anti-reflux surgery has a 70% success rate.
- Alarm symptoms (complications): dysphagia, early satiety, haematemesis, melaena, vomiting, weight loss
Examination
[edit | edit source]- Not really helpful
- Supraclavicular lymphadenopathy
- Yellow/poor dentition
Differentials:
[edit | edit source]- Dysphagia: Oesophageal rings/webs, oesophageal motility disorder
- Slowly progressive dysphagia: Strictures/cancers
- Odynophagia: infectious or medication-induced oesophagitis
- PUD
- Coronary artery disease
- Cholelithiasis
Workup:
[edit | edit source]- Barium swallow
- Not diagnostic, although mucosal changes may be seen. Useful for excluding differentials (diverticula, tumours, strictures, achalasia, dysmotility, gastroparesis)
- Allows definition of hiatal hernia
- Gastroscopy
- Indications for gastroscopy:
- Alarm features present and no endoscopy within three months
- New onset of dyspepsia in patient >60 years
- Evidence of GI bleeding
- Iron deficiency anaemia
- Anorexia
- Unexpained weight loss
- Dysphagia
- Odynophagia
- Persistent vomiting
- Gastrointestinal cancer in first-degree relative
- Screen for Barrett's oesophagus if they have multiple risk factors and also have had GORD for 5-10 years:
- Age >50
- Male
- White
- Hiatal hernia
- Obesity
- Nocturnal reflux
- Smoker
- First-degree relative with Barrett's and/or adenocarcinoma
- Alarm features present and no endoscopy within three months
- Findings:
- 70-85% of patients with symptoms defined as GORD have no evidence of oesophagitis on endoscopy
- Should be classified on upper endoscopy to
- Erosive oesophagitis - visible breaks in distal oesophageal mucosa
- Nonerosive reflux disease - no visible breaks
- Ulcerations in distal oesophagus
- Look for peptic strictures, Barrett's metaplasia, oesophageal adenocarcinoma
- Assess GOJ - retroflex 180 degrees in the stomach to visualise from below, and grade according to Hill classification (see 'gastroscopy technique')
- Note any hiatus hernia
- Grade severity of erosive oesophagitis. Most common scheme is Los Angeles classification (LA)
- Indications for gastroscopy:
| A | |
| B | |
| C |
|
| D |
- Peptic strictures and LA class C and D oesophagitis can be considered pathognomic for GORD, rendering pH monitoring unnecessary
- Oesophageal manometry
- Assesses function of oesophageal body and LOS
- Indications:
- Can be used in patients that might have a motility disorder - chest pain, dysphagia, normal upper endoscopy.
- Also should be done prior to anti-reflux surgery
- Main reason is to exclude motility disorders which might be made worse by an operation
- Ambulatory pH monitoring - gold standard
- Indications:
- Refractory GORD/typical symptoms but no improvement with PPI
- Useful to correlate symptoms with reflux and quantify oesophageal acid exposure
- Doubt over cause of oesophagitis - as in LA class A and B oesophagitis
- Technique:
- Need to stop PPI/antisecretory/antacids 2 weeks before
- One way is via trans-nasal probe, alternatively implant a Bravo capsule just above GOJ which communicates with a bluetooth device
- Patient also tracks their symptoms for correlation
- Calculate DeMeester score: >14.72 confirms pathologic GORD
- Uses factors for the score such as total number of reflux episodes, length of episodes, number of episodes lasting >5 minutes, percentage of time spent in reflux in upright and supine positions
- Peptic strictures can cause false-negative pH studies - ideally done after dilatation of the stricture and biopsied
- Indications:
- Oesophageal impedance monitoring
- Identifies episodes of non-acid reflux
- Often done in conjunction with pH monitoring
- Gastric emptying study
- CT
- Colonoscopy
Approach:
[edit | edit source]New patients with GORD:
[edit | edit source]- Consider gastroscopy if:
- Alarm features
- Risk factors for Barrett's and no endoscopy past 5-10 years
- Atypical symptoms
- Consider investigation to exclude alternative diagnoses
- Trial 8 weeks PPI
- Improvement - no further investigation
- No improvement - more extensive investigation
- Still no improvement or diagnosis - treat as refractory GORD
- Consider gastroscopy if:
Refractory GORD:
[edit | edit source]- Review PPI compliance - serum gastrin level should generally be 200-400pg/mL and only rarely above 500
- Gastroscopy if not already done
- Consider manometry and ambulatory pH monitoring
- Review associated factors below
- Manage medically as per UTD algorithm
- Consider whether they are likely to have a good response from surgery
Management:
[edit | edit source]Lifestyle (not proven very much)
[edit | edit source]- Weight loss (if overweight)
- Elevation of bed head
- Eliminate fatty foods, caffeine, chocolate, spicy foods, etc
- Don't eat right before bed
- Smaller, more frequent meals
- Quit smoking and drinking
- Elimination of constipation
Medical
[edit | edit source]- PPI
- Irreversibly binds the H+, K+-ATPase proton pump in parietal cells
- Require an acidic environment to be activated - may not work properly with sucralfate/antacids
- Maximal pharmacologic effect occurs about 4 days after initiation, and effect lasts for the life of the parietal cell (1 week)
- Maximal: BD PPI
- Side effects
- Short-term: headache, abdo pain, flatulence, constipation, diarrhoea
- Reports of long-term associations with dementia and bone density issues are based on observational studies and are hard to prove. 2024 expert opinion is that these risks should be de-emphasised. The true long-term risks are probably slightly higher risk of gut infection and electrolyte irregularities, including hypomagnesaemia.
- H2-receptor antagonists
- Inhibit the histamine receptor on the parietal cell
- Famotidine is the most potent, followed by ranitidine, nizatidine, and cimetidine
- Antacids
- Contain aluminium hydroxide, calcium carbonate, or magnesium trisilicate
- Magnesium antacids - best buffers, but can cause diarrhoea
- Phosphorus antacids - occasionally result in hypophosphataemia and constipation
- Neutralise gastric acid and decrease acid delivery to the duodenum, although the precise mechanism is unclear
- Sucralfate
- Sucrose octasulfate complexed with aluminium hydroxide
- Binds to injured gastric tissue and simulates angiogenesis and granulation tissue formation
- Lasts for about 6 hours
- PPI
Surgery
[edit | edit source]- Indications:
- Typical symptoms + objective signs (significant oesophagitis, Barrett's, hiatus hernia) = offer operation if medical management fails, generally with a screening Barium swallow beforehand to exclude dysmotility (manometry if concerning features for dysmotility)
- Atypical symptoms and/or lack of objective signs: refer for oesophageal manometry and pH, and operate based on DeMeester score
- Haematemesis
- Iron deficiency anaemia due to Cameron lesions
- Chest pain due to recurrent volvulus
- Predictors of good response:
- Best results in those with abnormal 24-hr pH score, typical primary symptoms and response to PPI (=90% will have good or excellent result)
- Typical symptoms = heartburn, acid regurgitation
- Atypical is cough, globus, hoarse voice, odynophagia, sore throat, etc = less predictive of good result from surgery
- Be very wary of patients with atypical symptoms or a history of not responding to PPI - should confirm pathological acid reflux with at least two objective tests prior to offering surgery
- Best chance of positive outcome in those <50yo
- Recurrent reflux more common in women, obese
- Best results in those with abnormal 24-hr pH score, typical primary symptoms and response to PPI (=90% will have good or excellent result)
- Hiatus hernia and GORD
- Plan intervention based on the degree that each problem is thought to be contributing to symptoms
- Hiatus hernia is likely to be the dominant process when main symptoms are dysphagia, food sticking, early satiety, regurgitation, chest pain and vomiting
- Will likely have relief with abdominal gastropexy and partial wrap
- Obesity and GORD
- RYGB can be a good way of simultaneously controlling GORD and obesity - excludes most parietal cells from contact with oesophagus, and also prevents duodenal acid from contacting oesophagus
- Consider RYGB instead of fundoplication
- Fundoplication should rarely be considered in patients with BMI > 40
- Avoid doing a sleeve gastrectomy in patients with GORD
- GORD with previous RYGB
- Cause - overly large gastric pouch, gastrogastric fistula, hiatal hernia
- Hard to do fundoplication due to lack of fundus
- Options - close gastrogastric fistula, correct hiatal hernia, revise large gastric pouch, magnetic sphincter implantation
- GORD with previous sleeve gastrectomy
- Hard to do fundoplication due to lack of fundus
- Options - convert to RYGB or fix the hiatus hernia or magnetic sphincter implantation
- Ineffective oesophageal motility
- Toupet/Dor might be safer than Nissen, to prevent dysphagia
- However, remains controversial, and total fundoplication will probably give better control in the long run
- If there is a total absence of oesophageal body contractility, much stronger indication for partial fundoplication only
- Barrett's oesophagus
- About half of patients with BE see endoscopic regression after anti-reflux surgery
- Should not be considered an indication for anti-reflux surgery alone
- If you do operate, need to continue endoscopic surveillance
- Young healthy patient with small HH and GORD
- Manage with PPI and lifestyle until requiring BD PPI and getting breakthrough symptoms
- Indications:
Refractory GORD:
[edit | edit source]- Note that recurrence of reflux symptoms and/or reflux oesophagitis on PPIs is closely related to status of LOS and oesophageal motility. If both are abnormal, 80% recurrence. If both are normal, 8% recurrence.
- ?medication timing and adherence
- ?Differences in PPI metabolism
- ?Residual acid reflux
- ?Non-acid reflux
- ?Reflux hypersensitivity
- ?Functional heartburn
Complications:
[edit | edit source]- Oesophageal
- Erosive oesophagitis - reflux causes necrosis of mucosa
- Barrett's oesophagus - metaplastic columnar epithelium replaces stratified squamous epithelium after chronic GORD.
- See separate topic
- Predisposes to CA
- No specific symptoms to allow it to be differentiated from GORD
- Can be complicated in turn by ulcerations, strictures, haemorrhage
- Strictures
- Occur as part of the healing process of ulcers - collagen is deposited, then contracts
- May get symptomatic eg obstruction
- Should be biopsied to exclude malignancy
- Treat with dilatation and acid-suppressive therapy, majority effectively
- Dilatation can be done with either a balloon dilator or Savary dilator
- Refractor strictures can be treated with anti-reflux surgery or steroid injections
- Extra-oesophageal
- Asthma
- Chronic laryngitis
- Laryngo-tracheal stenosis
- Chronic cough
- Etc