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Dysphagia
Transfer dysphagia is characterized by coughing, choking, or nasal
regurgitation. If present ask about cranial nerve symptoms.
Esophageal dysphagia is characterized by sticking further down. The
patient often perceives food as sticking higher up than it actually does.
Onset, frequency, intermittent vs progressive
Solids, liquids, both
What happens when food sticks ? Does it pass with repeated swallows ?
Do they need to drink water ? Special maneuvers (eg lift arms up).
What proportion of the time do they bring it up ?
Have they had to modify their diet ? (Solids & liquids vs mechanical soft vs liquid)
Zenker’s : lump in neck, gurgling sound
Other : weight loss, GERD symptoms (current or past), odynophagia (pain with swallowing), globus (feeling of a constant lump in the throat)
GERD
Symptoms:
Heartburn – retrosternal burning
Reflux – bitter taste at back of mouth
Other – waterbrash (rare) – fits of oral secretion +/- triggered by reflux
Onset, frequency, progression
Timing: time of day, relation to meals, duration, evening, does it wake the pt.
Treatments: drugs, doses, duration, response
Risk factors: nicotine, caffeine, smoking, chocolate, peppermint, alcohol
Systemic diseases: diabetes, scleroderma, other connective tissue disease, Raynaud’s
Extra-esophageal manifestations: cough, hoarseness, sore-throat, dental erosions, globus, pneumonia
Nausea / Vomiting
Onset, frequency, progression, viral illness
Timing: time of day, relation to meals, stress, etc
Characteristics:
Food vs gastric secretions/bile
Have they clearly seen food from the day before
blood (hematesis)
SBO symptoms: acute onset, associated pain, stop passing gas. Suddenly resolves +/- ‘diarrhea’
Complications: lightheaded, hospitalizations, weight loss, proportion of food kept down
Treatments & response
Systemic diseases: diabetes, scleroderma, other connective tissue disease, Raynaud’s
Associated symptoms: diarrhea, headaches, cranial nerve
Need to differentiate from regurgitation which is the non-forceful bringing up of recently ingested food.
Abdominal Pain – PQRST
P – provocation – meals, movement, bowel movements
P – palliations – treatments & response
Q – quality – dull/sharp, steady/crampy
R – radiation (where does it go to)
S – severity – scale of 1 to 10, effect on their function
T – timing – frequency, duration, course & progression
Associated symptoms: vomiting, passing gas pr etc
Constipation
Onset, progression, frequency of BMs (‘anything coming out’)
Character – change in form, scyballous (like pellets)
Straining, digital disimpaction, incontinence, ER visits
Obstructive (strain with no response) vs inertia (don’t get the urge to go)
Associations: blood, melena, pain (? Relieved by BM), nausea/vomiting,
Weight loss, abuse (physical, sexual, emotional), Raynaud’s
Diet (fiber), fluid, exercise
Treatments & response
Diarrhea & IBD
Onset, course, progression
BMs: frequency (day/night), consistency, blood (trace, 25%, 50% etc), cramps, tenesmus (feel they need to go, but nothing comes out)
Treatments & response (note dose & duration)
Extra-intestinal manifestations of IBD : painful red eyes, arthritis, low back pain, ulcers (skin, oral)
Risk factors: travel, untreated water, new medications
Steatorrhea: float or sink, how many times need to flush, see oil, smell
Other: surgeries, family history IBD, recent NSAIDs
IBD Rx: Dose, duration, compliance, response, hospitalisations
Abnormal LFTs
Past history, knowledge
Risk factors: Tattoo, acupuncture, IV drug abuse, alcohol, blood transfusion, STDs, multiple sexual partners, cocaine (nasal), herbal products, new medications (even a single dose), travel, family history
Symptoms: jaundice, itching, sleep reversal
Chronic liver symptoms: bleeding, increased abdominal girth
GI Bleeding
Eyeball patient +/- orthostatics – are they stable ?
Onset, progression, frequency, last event
Hematemesis, coffee emesis, hematochezia (red), melena
Complications: presyncope (postural lightheadedness), syncope (lost consciousness), chest pain, SOB
Risk factors: ASA, NSAIDs, ‘anti-inflammatories’, coumadin, steroids, SSRIs
History: PUD, bleeds, AAA repair, IBD, anemia, any other GI symptoms
OK to scope: symptoms of angina, CHF, need SBE prophylaxis ?
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