Dyspepsia, Functional
Basics
Description
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Postprandial fullness, early satiety, or epigastric pain/burning without identifiable structural cause
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Rome IV Criteria: symptoms present 1β3 days/week for β₯3 months, onset β₯6 months prior to diagnosis
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Subtypes:
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Postprandial Distress Syndrome (PDS)
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Epigastric Pain Syndrome (EPS)
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Systems Affected
- Gastrointestinal
Synonyms
- Idiopathic dyspepsia, nonulcer dyspepsia, PDS, EPS
Epidemiology
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Accounts for 70% of dyspepsia cases
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~5% of primary care visits
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10β20% prevalence worldwide
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PDS: more common in Eastern cultures
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Female > male
Etiology and Pathophysiology
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Multifactorial:
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Visceral hypersensitivity
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Delayed gastric emptying
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Gut-brain axis disturbance
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H. pylori infection
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Microbiome alterations
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Genetic links: G-protein Ξ²3, serotonin transporter, cholecystokinin-A receptor
Risk Factors
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Functional syndromes (IBS, fibromyalgia)
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Psychological: anxiety, depression, trauma
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Smoking
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NSAID use
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Female gender
Associated Conditions
- Other functional GI disorders
Diagnosis
History
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Symptoms: postprandial fullness, early satiety, epigastric pain/burning β₯3 months
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Alarm features:
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Weight loss
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Progressive dysphagia
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GI bleeding
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Vomiting
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Age β₯60
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Family history of GI cancer
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Physical Exam
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Vital signs, weight
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Abdominal exam:
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Murphyβs sign, rebound/guarding
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Carnett sign
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Look for jaundice, thyromegaly
Differential Diagnosis
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GERD, peptic ulcer, IBD, celiac
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Pancreatitis, cancer, gastroparesis
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Ischemia, thyroid disease, medications
Diagnostic Tests
Initial
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H. pylori testing: stool antigen or urea breath test
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CBC, LFTs, pancreatic enzymes as indicated
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Upper endoscopy:
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Indicated if age β₯60 or alarm features
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Not routinely recommended in age <60 without red flags
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Other
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Motility or accommodation studies rarely needed
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Functional tests not routinely useful
Treatment
General Measures
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Reassurance, stress management
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Discontinue offending drugs
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Avoid unnecessary tests in low-risk patients
First Line
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Treat H. pylori if positive
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PPI (e.g., omeprazole 20 mg QD) or H2 blocker Γ 8 weeks
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Prokinetics (e.g., metoclopramide 5β10 mg TID) for PDS (use cautiously)
Second Line
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TCAs (e.g., amitriptyline 25β50 mg QD) for EPS
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Trazodone, buspirone, or mirtazapine as alternatives
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Gabapentin 300 mg BID for refractory pain
Adjunct Therapies
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Cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT)
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Stress reduction techniques
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Positive diagnosis + reassurance of benign prognosis
Complementary & Alternative Medicine
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STW-5 (Iberogast): promising but needs more data
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Probiotics: inconsistent evidence
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Hypnotherapy, electroacupuncture: may help
Ongoing Care
Follow-Up
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Monitor every 4β6 weeks
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Re-evaluate if no improvement after 4 weeks
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Stop meds once symptoms resolve
Diet
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Limit FODMAPs, fatty foods
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Avoid spicy, coffee, tea, alcohol, milk/wheat
Patient Education
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Emphasize stress reduction
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Discuss good prognosis
Prognosis
- Chronic with intermittent symptom-free periods
Complications
- Iatrogenic from over-testing
Clinical Pearls
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Functional dyspepsia = diagnosis of exclusion
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PPI trial is first step in most patients
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Avoid extensive testing unless alarm features present
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Prokinetics help with PDS; TCAs help EPS
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Supportive care and reassurance are essential for long-term success