Dyspepsia and GORD

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Quick Overview

Dyspepsia (epigastric pain/discomfort) affects ~25% of the population annually. GORD (gastro-oesophageal reflux disease) results from lower oesophageal sphincter dysfunction causing acid reflux. NICE CG184 provides evidence-based guidance on PPI prescribing, H. pylori management, and when to refer urgently. Key focus: distinguishing uncomplicated dyspepsia from alarm features requiring endoscopy within 2 weeks.

Core Facts & Concepts

Definitions & Epidemiology

  • Dyspepsia: Epigastric pain/burning, postprandial fullness, early satiety for ≥4 weeks
  • GORD: Symptoms (heartburn, regurgitation) ± oesophageal mucosal injury from reflux
  • Prevalence: 10-30% adults; only 10-15% have erosive oesophagitis on endoscopy

🚩 Red Flag Symptoms (Urgent Endoscopy <2 weeks)

  • Age ≥55 years with unexplained persistent dyspepsia
  • Dysphagia (any age)
  • Progressive unintentional weight loss
  • Persistent vomiting
  • Upper abdominal mass
  • Iron-deficiency anaemia
  • Gastrointestinal bleeding (melaena/haematemesis)

Figure 1: Endoscopy showing salmon-pink columnar epithelium extending above gastro-oesophageal junction

H. pylori Testing Strategies

  • Test-and-treat: For uninvestigated dyspepsia without red flags, age <55
  • Methods: Urea breath test (UBT) or stool antigen test (NOT serology)
  • Stop PPI 2 weeks before testing (false negatives)
  • Eradication therapy: 7-day triple therapy (PPI + amoxicillin + clarithromycin/metronidazole)
  • Confirm eradication: UBT ≥4 weeks post-treatment

PPI Prescribing (NICE CG184)

  • Initial: Full-dose PPI (e.g., omeprazole 20mg) for 4 weeks
  • Maintenance: Lowest effective dose, on-demand therapy preferred
  • Review annually: Attempt dose reduction or stopping

Problem-Solving Approach

Step-by-Step Management

  1. Assess for red flags → Urgent endoscopy if present (age ≥55 + new dyspepsia = red flag)
  2. Review medications: NSAIDs, calcium antagonists, nitrates, bisphosphonates (cause/worsen symptoms)
  3. Lifestyle modifications (offer to all):
    • Weight loss if BMI >25
    • Avoid late-night meals (≥3 hours before bed)
    • Reduce alcohol, caffeine, fatty foods
    • Smoking cessation
    • Elevate bed head (not extra pillows)
  4. H. pylori test-and-treat (age <55, no red flags):
    • Stop PPI 2 weeks before test
    • Eradicate if positive
    • Confirm eradication ≥4 weeks post-treatment
  5. Empirical PPI trial: Full-dose × 4 weeks if H. pylori negative or eradication confirmed
  6. Step-up therapy: Double-dose PPI or add H2-receptor antagonist (e.g., ranitidine) if inadequate response
  7. Refer for endoscopy: Persistent symptoms after treatment, recurrent relapse, or patient preference

Figure 2: Upper GI endoscopy showing linear erosions in distal oesophagus with erythema

⚠️ Warning: Do NOT use serology for H. pylori testing-remains positive after eradication, cannot confirm current infection.

Analysis Framework

Differential Diagnosis of Dyspepsia

DiagnosisKey FeaturesInvestigation
GORDHeartburn, regurgitation, worse lying flatEndoscopy (often normal), pH monitoring
Peptic ulcerEpigastric pain, relation to meals, NSAID useEndoscopy + biopsy (H. pylori)
Functional dyspepsiaNo structural abnormality, normal endoscopyDiagnosis of exclusion
Gastric cancerWeight loss, anaemia, age >55, dysphagiaEndoscopy + biopsy
Biliary colicRUQ pain, postprandial, radiates to backUltrasound (gallstones)

When to Step Down/Stop PPI

  • Symptom-free for 4-8 weeks → Trial dose reduction
  • Attempt on-demand therapy (take when symptomatic)
  • Review annually-long-term PPI risks: C. difficile, osteoporosis, hypomagnesaemia

Visual Aid

Key Points Summary

Red flags (age ≥55 + new dyspepsia, dysphagia, weight loss, anaemia, GI bleeding) → urgent endoscopy <2 weeks

Test-and-treat H. pylori in age <55 without red flags using UBT or stool antigen (stop PPI 2 weeks before)

PPI therapy: Full-dose × 4 weeks initially, then step down to lowest effective dose or on-demand (NICE CG184)

Lifestyle modifications: Weight loss, avoid late meals, reduce alcohol/caffeine, smoking cessation, elevate bed head

Confirm H. pylori eradication with UBT ≥4 weeks post-treatment (NOT serology-stays positive)

Review PPI annually: Attempt dose reduction/stopping-long-term risks include C. difficile, osteoporosis, hypomagnesaemia

Refer for endoscopy: Persistent symptoms despite treatment, recurrent relapse, patient preference for investigation

Practice Questions: Dyspepsia and GORD

Test your understanding with these related questions

A 44-year-old woman presents with recurrent episodes of severe right upper quadrant pain after eating fatty foods. The pain radiates to her right shoulder and lasts several hours. What is the most likely diagnosis?

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Flashcards: Dyspepsia and GORD

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A plain abdominal X ray for Hirschsprungs Disease will demonstrate _____

TAP TO REVEAL ANSWER

A plain abdominal X ray for Hirschsprungs Disease will demonstrate _____

dilated loops of bowel with fluid levels

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