GI Endoscopy Practice

GI Endoscopy Practice Gastroenterologists are medical specialists trained for six years including internal medical residency. Gastero doctors mainly deal with disorders of gastr

02/02/2021

Fact: recipe for reflux or GERD commonly known as acidity in India :
1. Late eating fried, onion and spicey
2. Abdominal obesity
3. Coffee or tea
4. Alcohol
5. Smoking or to***co chewing
6. Constipation

Waiting for COVID 19 shot 1
01/02/2021

Waiting for COVID 19 shot 1

09/01/2020

The recent uptick in many states is particularly worrying as a holiday weekend and the fall season quickly approach. Dr. Ashish Jha, director of the Harvard Global Health Institute, said he’s “nervous” about activity over Labor Day weekend and about the months ahead as the weather turns, flu season settles in and people perhaps let up their guard against the virus.

“I think the fall is going to be a bit of a mess,” he said in a phone interview last week. “If Labor Day begins with a 50-person backyard barbecue that turns into a 30-person indoor drinks after the sun goes down, that’s going to be a huge problem.”

He added that Labor Day could mark the beginning of what may be difficult months ahead. However, he said he does see “glimmers of hope” in recent advances in testing and treatment that could empower local officials to prevent outbreaks and save lives.

“Once you get beyond September, so much is changing so fast. Some part of me keeps hoping that will be okay as time goes along,” he said. “But boy, there’s a lot of months ahead before this stuff starts getting meaningfully better.”

05/04/2020

In early March, a 71-year-old Michigan woman returned from a Nile River cruise with bloody diarrhea, vomiting, and abdominal pain. Initially doctors suspected she had a common stomach bug, such as Salmonella. But after she developed a cough, doctors took a nasal swab and found her positive for the novel coronavirus. A stool sample positive for viral RNA, as well as signs of colon injury seen in an endoscopy, pointed to a gastrointestinal (GI) infection with the coronavirus, according to a paper posted online in The American Journal of Gastroenterology (AJG).
Her case adds to a growing body of evidence suggesting the new coronavirus, like its cousin SARS, can infect the lining of the lower digestive tract, where the crucial ACE2 receptors are abundant. Viral RNA has been found in as many as 53% of sampled patients’ stool samples. And in a paper in press at Gastroenterology, a Chinese team reported finding the virus’ protein shell in gastric, duodenal, and re**al cells in biopsies from a COVID-19 patient. “I think it probably does replicate in the gastrointestinal tract,” says Mary Estes, a virologist at Baylor College of Medicine. Recent reports suggest up to half of patients, averaging about 20% across studies, experience diarrhea, says Brennan Spiegel of Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, co–editor-in-chief of AJG. GI symptoms aren’t on CDC’s list of COVID-19 symptoms, which could cause some COVID-19 cases to go undetected, Spiegel and others say. “If you mainly have fever and diarrhea, you won’t be tested for COVID,” says Douglas Corley of Kaiser Permanente, Northern California, co-editor of Gastroenterology.
The presence of virus in the GI tract raises the unsettling possibility that it could be passed on through f***s. But it’s not yet clear whether stool contains intact, infectious virus, or only RNA and proteins. To date, “We have no evidence” that f***l transmission is important, says coronavirus expert Stanley Perlman of the University of Iowa. CDC says that based on experiences with SARS and with the virus that causes Middle East respiratory syndrome, another dangerous cousin of the new coronavirus, the risk from f***l transmission is probably low.
The intestines are not the end of the disease’s march through the body. For example, up to one-third of hospitalized patients develop conjunctivitis—pink, watery eyes—although it’s not clear that the virus directly invades the eye. Other reports suggest liver damage: More than half of COVID-19 patients hospitalized in two Chinese centers had elevated levels of enzymes indicating injury to the liver or bile ducts. But several experts told Science that direct viral invasion isn’t likely the culprit. They say other events in a failing body, like drugs or an immune system in overdrive, are more likely driving the liver damage.

12/28/2019

October 29, 2019

Alcohol-Producing Gut Bacteria Might Be a Trigger for Nonalcoholic Fatty Liver Disease

Anthony L. Komaroff, MD reviewing Yuan J et al. Cell Metab 2019 Oct 1

More than half of 43 patients with NAFLD harbored a bacterial species that causes high blood alcohol levels.

A man with fatty liver disease walked into a Chinese doctor's office. (No, this is not a joke.) The man denied drinking and appeared credible. Nevertheless, the doctor obtained a blood alcohol level, and it was 40 mg/dL — a level at which people can be mildly intoxicated (the legal limit for driving in the U.S. generally is 80 mg/dL). The curious doctor then placed the man on an alcohol-free, high-carbohydrate diet for several days under observation, and his blood alcohol level remained high.

Alcohol-producing strains of Klebsiella pneumoniae were remarkably prevalent in the man's stool. The same result was found in stools of 60% of 43 other people with nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD). To evaluate the potential of these bacteria to cause disease, human f***s rich in these bacteria were transplanted by oral gavage into germ-free mice. The mice developed NAFLD that was associated with a typical histologic picture and blood-chemistry profile (i.e., elevated transaminases and triglycerides). When the f***l material was treated with viruses that selectively killed the alcohol-producing K. pneumoniae strains prior to oral f***l transplant, oral gavage did not produce NAFLD. When oral gavage was combined with either a high-fat or high-carbohydrate diet, elicited NAFLD was more severe.

COMMENT
This provocative study suggests that alcohol-producing strains of gut bacteria might be a common cause of NAFLD: Bacterially produced gut alcohol travels through the enterohepatic circulation to the liver, causing toxicity. That is, alcohol, but not alcoholism, might be one cause of “nonalcoholic” FLD. This study from China needs to be replicated in other parts of the world.

01/05/2019

Six ways to exercise that won’t strain your budget:
- Walking
- Skipping rope
- Exercise balls
- Dumbbells
- Calisthenics
- Fitness DVDs

12/08/2018

Next era is to define what food we can eat as medicine!

10/18/2018

“The greatest weapon against stress is our ability to choose one thought over another.
—WILLIAM JAMES”

Very true Even eating needs focus and time !
09/09/2018

Very true
Even eating needs focus and time !

A IMPORTANT READING FOR EVERYBODY
08/26/2018

A IMPORTANT READING FOR EVERYBODY

The overall risk of drinking alcohol outweighs any known benefits, according to a study of 195 nations and territories.

07/29/2018

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