18 research outputs found

    The role of food and aeroallergens in eosinophilic oesophagitis

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    Eosinophilic oesophagitis (EoE) is a chronic inflammatory condition that afflicts children and adults, and causes oesophageal narrowing and fibrosis, with the resultant clinical sequelae of dysphagia and food bolus obstruction events (FBOE), the latter often resulting is hospitalisation, emergency endoscopic removal and rarely but catastrophically oesophageal perforation. An increasing number of patients are being diagnosed with EoE, and this is independent of a growing awareness of this recently defined condition, but rather represents a true increase in the context of a global rise (in Western first-world countries) of allergic conditions per se. The mainstays of medical treatment for EoE are indefinite PPI therapy or swallowed topical corticosteroids. These therapeutic assets are highly effective but they do not ultimately target the etiologic cause of EoE. A role for aeroallergens (pollens) and dietary allergens (food) in precipitating or causing EoE has been suggested in a number of studies, albeit limited by their retrospective nature and lack of control group (in the case of aeroallergens), the predominance of paediatric literature and variable use of adjunctive treatment such as proton pump inhibitors (PPIs) (in the case of food allergens). Highly restrictive elimination diets show promise in treating EoE. Unfortunately, the role of allergy tests in directing dietary therapy remains debatable and studies are again of a retrospective nature or utilise a small range of available tests. This means that even if dietary therapy works, that patients are required to undergo many gastroscopies during their treatment course, which is both inconvenient, expensive and has the associated risk of an anaesthetic. Thus, the need both to better understand the role of food and aeroallergens (with more comprehensive prospective studies), and to offer less invasive and thereby safer endoscopic surveillance is readily apparent

    Food, fibre, bile acids and the pelvic floor:An integrated low risk low cost approach to managing irritable bowel syndRome

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    Patients presenting with abdominal pain and diarrhea are often labelled as suffering from irritable bowel syndrome, and medications may be used often without success. Advances in the understanding of the causes of the symptoms (including pelvic floor weakness and incontinence, bile salt malabsorption and food intolerance) mean that effective, safe and well tolerated treatments are now available

    Dysphagia:Thinking outside the box

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    The extraction of negative carbon ions from a volume cusp ion source

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    Acetylene and carbon dioxide gases are used in a filament-powered volume-cusp ion source to produce negative carbon ions for the purpose of carbon implantation for gettering applications. The beam was extracted to an energy of 25 keV and the composition was analyzed with a spectrometer system consisting of a 90° dipole magnet and a pair of slits. It is found that acetylene produces mostly C−2 ions (up to 92 µA), while carbon dioxide produces mostly O− with only trace amounts of C−. Maximum C−2 current was achieved with 400 W of arc power and, the beam current and composition were found to be highly dependent on the pressure in the source. The beam properties as a function of source settings are analyzed, and plasma properties are measured with a Langmuir probe. Finally, we describe testing of a new RF H− ion source, found to produce more than 6 mA of CW H− beam.peerReviewe
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