TY - JOUR
T1 - Chronic dyspepsia pain in general practice - its causes and diagnosis
AU - Gazzard, B. G.
AU - Lance, P.
AU - Gibson-Glubb, S.
AU - Gazzard, J. A.
PY - 1985
Y1 - 1985
N2 - One hundred consecutive patients who had consulted their general practitioner because of upper abdominal pain related to eating, were investigated after initial interviews by the general practitioner, a medical registrarand the same consultant physician. Thirty seven had active upper gastrointestinal or biliary tract diseases, including 29 with peptic ulcers. The general practitioner and consultant correctly distinguished between organic andnon-organic dyspepsia (NOD) in 51 and 65 cases respectively. Although the sensitivity of the general practitioner diagnosis of organic disease was high (95%), the specificity (23%) and predictive value (42%) were low. There were fewer organic diagnoses amongst the patients under the age of 30 (P<0.05) and those with symptoms for less than 3 months (P<0.01). No patient under 30 with symptoms for less than 3 months had organic dyspepsia. We suggestthat if dyspeptic patients over the age of 30 and those under 30 with symptoms for longer than 3 months are investigated, about one-third will be found to have organic diseases.
AB - One hundred consecutive patients who had consulted their general practitioner because of upper abdominal pain related to eating, were investigated after initial interviews by the general practitioner, a medical registrarand the same consultant physician. Thirty seven had active upper gastrointestinal or biliary tract diseases, including 29 with peptic ulcers. The general practitioner and consultant correctly distinguished between organic andnon-organic dyspepsia (NOD) in 51 and 65 cases respectively. Although the sensitivity of the general practitioner diagnosis of organic disease was high (95%), the specificity (23%) and predictive value (42%) were low. There were fewer organic diagnoses amongst the patients under the age of 30 (P<0.05) and those with symptoms for less than 3 months (P<0.01). No patient under 30 with symptoms for less than 3 months had organic dyspepsia. We suggestthat if dyspeptic patients over the age of 30 and those under 30 with symptoms for longer than 3 months are investigated, about one-third will be found to have organic diseases.
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U2 - 10.1136/pgmj.61.715.411
DO - 10.1136/pgmj.61.715.411
M3 - Article
C2 - 4022876
AN - SCOPUS:0021862746
SN - 0032-5473
VL - 61
SP - 411
EP - 413
JO - Postgraduate Medical Journal
JF - Postgraduate Medical Journal
IS - 715
ER -