GASTRIC MOTOR ACTIVITY IN PATIENTS WITH PEPTIC ULCER
- 1 April 1925
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA) in Archives of internal medicine (1960)
- Vol. 35 (4) , 423-432
- https://doi.org/10.1001/archinte.1925.00120100021002
Abstract
In any report of experimental work on chronic peptic ulcer, the method of arriving at a diagnosis of ulcer is important. I chose twenty-nine patients who presented: (a) carefully elicited clinical histories of attacks of regularly recurring epigastric distress with definite relation to meal taking; (b) relief from pain by eating, by emptying the stomach and by alkalis (all of these repeatedly demonstrated during a ten or fourteen day period of hospital observation while on a diagnostic "testout"),1 and (c) complete relief from pain while on ulcer treatment. This lasted for four weeks in the hospital and continued for months at home. (The follow-up on these patients extends over from one to two years in the Sippy routine.) The above named conditions (a, b and c) were all characteristically present in the twenty-nine patients. In addition, (d) a number had gastric peristaltic waves and other evidence of chronic obstruction atThis publication has 0 references indexed in Scilit: