Physical-Exam
- Nonspecific, may have some epigastric tenderness.
- Symptoms worsen with placing patient flat on the bed or Trendelenburg position
Pediatric Considerations
- Regurgitation is common in infants:
- Incidence decreases from twice daily in 50% of those age 2 mo to 1% of 1-yr-olds.
- Signs:
- Frequent vomiting, irritability, cough, crying, and malaise
- Arching the body (hyperextension) at feeding and refusals of feedings
- Failure to thrive
- Formula intolerance
- Sepsis
ESSENTIAL WORKUP
- Differentiate GERD from more emergent conditions such as ischemic heart pain, esophageal perforation, or aortic pathology.
- Obtain typical history
- Perform thorough physical exam: Vital signs, head, ears, eyes, nose, throat (HEENT), chest and abdominal exams
DIAGNOSIS TESTS & NTERPRETATION
No gold standard
Lab
- CBC:
- Chronic anemia from esophagitis
- Stool testing for occult bleeding
Imaging
- No routine Imaging
- Chest radiograph:
- Evidence of esophageal perforation, hiatal hernia, aortic disease
Diagnostic Procedures/Surgery
- Diagnostic trial of antacid:
- Those with persistent symptoms should be referred for endoscopy
- 90% of GERD patients respond to proton pump inhibitor (PPI) therapy
- Barium esophagram for prominent dysphagia
- Esophageal pH monitoring:
- Correlate symptoms to acid reflux
- Esophageal manometry (poor sensitivity):
- Evaluate LES resting pressure and esophageal peristaltic contractions
- Esophagogastroduodenoscopy (EGD)—detects reflux esophagitis and complications (Barrett esophagus, hiatal hernia, stricture, ulcers, malignancy)
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
- Ischemic heart disease
- Asthma
- Peptic ulcer disease
- Gastritis
- Hepatitis/pancreatitis
- Esophageal perforation
- Esophageal foreign body
- Esophageal infection
- Cholecystitis/cholelithiasis
- Mesenteric ischemia
TREATMENT
PRE HOSPITAL
- Esophageal pain may mimic angina
- Airway may need active control secondary to vomiting
INITIAL STABILIZATION/THERAPY
- ABCs need to be evaluated
- IV fluid resuscitation for blood loss or shock
ED TREATMENT/PROCEDURES
- Symptomatic relief:
- Antacids
- Antacids with viscous lidocaine
- Sublingual nitroglycerine for esophageal spasm
- Analgesics
- Lifestyle modifications:
- Avoid late-night or heavy/fatty meals.
- Minimize time in supine position after eating.
- Elevation of head of bed
- Weight loss
- Eliminate smoking and alcohol intake
- Avoid direct esophageal irritants such as citric juices and coffee
- Avoid foods that decrease LES pressures such as fatty foods, chocolate, and coffee
- Avoid drugs that lower LES tone
- PPIs:
- More potent long-acting inhibitors of gastric acid secretion than H
2
-blockers
- Faster healing than other drug therapies
- More efficacious in severe GERD and frank esophagitis
- H
2
-blockers:
- Effective for mild to moderate disease
- Severe disease requires greater dosage than that used for peptic ulcer disease
- Antacids (Maalox, Mylanta):
- Treatment of mild and infrequent reflux symptoms
- Not effective for healing esophagitis
- Alginic acid slurry floats on surface of gastric contents, providing mechanical barrier
- Sucralfate:
- Binds to exposed proteins on surface of injured mucosa to form protective barrier
- May also directly stimulate mucosal repair
- Metoclopramide (prokinetic drug):
- Improves peristalsis
- Accelerates gastric emptying
- Increases LES pressure
- Drugs that modify TLESR
- Endoscopic therapy:
- Suturing (plication), thermal injury, chemical injection
- Antireflux surgery (goal: Increase LES pressure):
- Chronic reflux, younger patients, nonhealing ulceration, severe bleeding
- Fundoplication can be more effective than medical therapy in selected cases
- Currently newer incisionless procedure called transoral incisionless fundoplication available
Pregnancy Considerations
- Reflux present in 30–50% of pregnancies
- Increased intra-abdominal pressure, hormonal fluctuations lead to increased TLESRs
- EGD reserved for severe presentations
- H
2
-blockers—1st-line therapy (longer safety record)
- PPIs—limited safety history in pregnancy
MEDICATION
- Antacids: 30 mL + viscous lidocaine, 10 mL, PO q6h
- Cimetidine: 400 mg PO BID, 300 mg IM/IV q6–8h
- Esomeprazole: 20–40 mg PO daily
- Famotidine: 20 mg PO/IV BID (peds: 0.5–1 mg/kg/d div. q8–12h, max. 40 mg/d)
- Lansoprazole: 15–30 mg daily
- Metoclopramide: 10–15 mg PO/IV/IM q6h before meals and nightly at bedtime
- Nizatidine: 150 mg PO BID
- Omeprazole: 20–40 mg PO daily
- Pantoprazole: 40 mg PO/IV daily
- Rabeprazole: 20 mg PO daily
- Ranitidine: 150 mg (peds: 5–10 mg/kg q12h) PO BID or 300 mg PO nightly at bedtime
- Sucralfate: 1 g PO 1 hr before meals and nightly at bedtime
First Line
- Life style modifications:
- Head of bed elevation
- Dietary modification
- Refraining from assuming a supine position after meals
- Avoidance of tight-fitting garments
- Promotion of salivation by either chewing gum
- Restriction of alcohol use
- Reduction of obesity
- Acid-suppressive medications:
- Treatment of
H. pylori
infections
Second Line
- Prokinetic drugs (bethanechol, metoclopramide)
- Drugs that inhibit TLESRs (baclofen)
FOLLOW-UP
DISPOSITION
Admission Criteria
- Significant esophageal bleeding
- Uncontrolled reactive asthma
- Dehydration
- Starvation and failure to thrive
Discharge Criteria
Uncomplicated GERD: Refer to patient’s primary care physician (PCP) or gastroenterologist for further evaluation.
Issues for Referral
Extraesophageal manifestations such as asthma, laryngitis.
FOLLOW-UP RECOMMENDATIONS
Gastroenterologist for endoscopy in patients who require continuous maintenance medical therapy to rule out Barrett esophagus.
PEARLS AND PITFALLS
- GERD therapy should include lifestyle changes.
- In patients with worse than mild and intermittent GERD symptoms initiate acid-suppressive therapy.
- In patients with GERD and moderate to severe esophagitis, provide acid suppression with a PPI rather than H
2
blockers.
- Endoscopy for patients who fail chronic therapy (at least 8 wk).
- Antireflux surgery for patients on high doses of PPIs, specially in young patients who may require lifelong therapy.
- Complications of GERD
- Esophagitis
- Peptic stricture and Barrett metaplasia
- Extraesophageal manifestations of reflux: Asthma, laryngitis, and cough.
ADDITIONAL READING
- Cappell MS. Clinical presentation, diagnosis, and management of gastroesophageal reflux disease.
Med Clin North Am
. 2005;89(2):243–291.
- DeVault KR, Castell DO, American College of Gastroenterology. Updated guidelines for the diagnosis and treatment of gastroesophageal reflux disease.
Am J Gastroenterol
. 2005;100:190–200.
- Diav-Citrin O, Arnon J, Shechtman S, et al. The safety of proton pump inhibitors in pregnancy: A multicentre prospective controlled study.
Aliment Pharmacol Ther
. 2005;21:269–275.
- Kahrilas PJ, Shaheen NJ, Vaezi MF. American Gastroenterological Association Institute technical review on the management of gastroesophageal reflux disease.
Gastroenterology.
2008;135:1392–1413.
- Kaltenbach T, Crockett S, Gerson LB. Are lifestyle measures effective in patients with gastroesophageal reflux disease? An evidence-based approach.
Arch Intern Med.
2006;166:965–971.
- Nwokediuko SC. Current trends in the management of gastroesophageal reflux disease: A review.
ISRN Gastroenterol.
2012;2012:391631.
See Also (Topic, Algorithm, Electronic Media Element)
- Gastritis
- Peptic Ulcer Disease
CODES