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==Historical Perspective==
==Historical Perspective==
Indigestion is an old English word meaning ‘lack of digestion’, and dyspepsia symptoms have been recognized since the birth of medicine. However, the underlying pathogenesis of dyspepsia only began to be appreciated when Baillie in 1799 first described the anatomy and symptoms of gastric ulcer disease.
*Indigestion is an old English word meaning ‘lack of digestion’, and dyspepsia symptoms have been recognized since the birth of medicine. However, the underlying pathogenesis of dyspepsia only began to be appreciated when Baillie in 1799 first described the anatomy and symptoms of gastric ulcer disease.
 
*Development of barium X-ray radiology by Cannon in 1897 led to the clinical recognition of [[peptic ulcer disease]] and its relationship with symptoms.
Development of barium X-ray radiology by Cannon in 1897 led to the clinical recognition of [[peptic ulcer disease]] and its relationship with symptoms.
*Walter Alvarez at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, MN was the first to apply the term 'functional dyspepsia' in 1916 to describe patients with ulcer-like symptoms and a normal X-ray.
 
Walter Alvarez at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, MN was the first to apply the term 'functional dyspepsia' in 1916 to describe patients with ulcer-like symptoms and a normal X-ray.


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 16:41, 22 January 2018

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Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]

Overview

The current understanding of the pathogenesis of dyspepsia began with the first description of gastric ulcer disease in 1799. The term was first used in its current form in 1916 by Walter Alvarez.

Historical Perspective

  • Indigestion is an old English word meaning ‘lack of digestion’, and dyspepsia symptoms have been recognized since the birth of medicine. However, the underlying pathogenesis of dyspepsia only began to be appreciated when Baillie in 1799 first described the anatomy and symptoms of gastric ulcer disease.
  • Development of barium X-ray radiology by Cannon in 1897 led to the clinical recognition of peptic ulcer disease and its relationship with symptoms.
  • Walter Alvarez at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, MN was the first to apply the term 'functional dyspepsia' in 1916 to describe patients with ulcer-like symptoms and a normal X-ray.

References

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