Abstract
Even in the absence of visible lesions like an ulcer, cancer or oesophagitis, patients with functional dyspepsia may complain of severe dyspeptic symptoms and have a poor quality of life. Characteristically, these patients also often have a low estimate of their own health and have complaints from several organ systems. The cause of the disease is not known. Both central nervous system and gastric disturbances appear to be involved, and their relative importance is controversial. There is no clear beneficial effect of acid suppression or H. pylori eradication although effects of such therapy may be seen in minor subgroups. New findings emphasise the importance of distinguishing between functional dyspepsia and gastro-oesophageal reflux disease, which exhibit completely different gastric accommodation patterns to a meal and have very different therapeutic potential. The effect of drugs like glyceryl trinitrate, glucagon, sumatriptan and buspirone which all concomitantly improve symptoms and gastric accommodation support the important role of abnormal gastric accommodation to meals in patients with functional dyspepsia. A hypothetical model for the pathogenesis of functional dyspepsia is presented. It incorporates four established abnormalities: various psychological abnormalities, low vagal tone, impaired gastric relaxation, and visceral hypersensitivity, in a logical interplay along the brain-gut axis.
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