Paper
The pathogenesis of heartburn in nonerosive reflux disease: a unifying hypothesis.
Published Mar 1, 2005 ·
Gastroenterology
258
Citations
7
Influential Citations
Abstract
Heartburn is a symptom complex that has traditionally been accepted as an acid-mediated event and a reliable indicator of gastroesophageal reflux disease. Recently, however, these concepts have been questioned because patients with endoscopy-negative "heartburn" have lower response rates to acid suppression with proton pump inhibitors than do patients with endoscopy-positive "heartburn," ie, erosive esophagitis. As explanation for this, 3 different mechanisms have been proposed to explain the occurrence of heartburn in the endoscopy-negative setting. They are: esophageal visceral hypersensitivity, sustained esophageal contractions, and abnormal tissue resistance. In this report, we review the observations in support of each concept and propose a means for reconciling them under one hypothesis: abnormal tissue resistance. Essential to this review and to the conclusions drawn about the pathogenesis of heartburn in nonerosive reflux disease is a reaffirmation of the definition of reflux-associated "heartburn" as an acid-mediated event requiring "relief by antacids" as a necessary component of the history.
Abnormal tissue resistance is the main cause of heartburn in nonerosive reflux disease, reconciling various proposed mechanisms and reaffirming the definition of reflux-associated "heartburn" as an acid-mediated event requiring antacids.
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