Background and aims: Achalasia is a disease of unknown aetiology. An immune mechanism has been suggested on the basis of previous morphological observations. The objective of this study was to test whether the serum of achalasia patients could reproduce the phenotype and functional changes that occur with disease progression in an ex vivo human model.Methods: Specimens of normal human fundus were maintained in culture in the presence of serum from patients with achalasia, gastro-oesophageal reflux disease (GORD), or healthy subjects (controls). Immunohistochemical detection of choline acetyltransferase (ChAT), neurone specific enolase (NSE), vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP), nitric oxide synthase (NOS), and substance P was carried ou...
BACKGROUND: Achalasia is a rare motility disorder characterized by myenteric neuron and interstitial...
BACKGROUND: Achalasia is a rare motility disorder characterized by myenteric neuron and interstitia...
Abstract Achalasia is dominated by injury to inhibi-tory nerves. As intramuscular interstitial cells...
Background and aims: Achalasia is a disease of unknown aetiology. An immune mechanism has been sugge...
OBJECTIVE: We performed a qualitative and quantitative analysis of the nitrinergic neurons in the es...
High-resolution manometry and recently described analysis algorithms, summarized in the Chicago Clas...
SummaryAchalasia is a rare motility disorder of the oesophagus characterised by loss of enteric neur...
OBJECTIVES: Achalasia is a primary esophageal motility disorder resulting from selective loss of inh...
SummaryAchalasia is a rare motility disorder of the oesophagus characterised by loss of enteric neur...
Background and aim: It is suggested that achalasia represents an autoimmune disorder in which a trig...
Introduction: Achalasia is a primary motility disorder of the esophagus due to degeneration neurons ...
Background/Aims:Esophageal achalasia is a motility disorder of the esophagus characterized by the lo...
Copyright © 2015 J. Furuzawa-Carballeda et al. This is an open access article distributed under the ...
Achalasia is a rare disorder of the oesophageal smooth muscle characterized by impaired relaxation o...
Dysfunction of the gastrointestinal neuromuscular apparatus (including interstitial cells of Cajal) ...
BACKGROUND: Achalasia is a rare motility disorder characterized by myenteric neuron and interstitial...
BACKGROUND: Achalasia is a rare motility disorder characterized by myenteric neuron and interstitia...
Abstract Achalasia is dominated by injury to inhibi-tory nerves. As intramuscular interstitial cells...
Background and aims: Achalasia is a disease of unknown aetiology. An immune mechanism has been sugge...
OBJECTIVE: We performed a qualitative and quantitative analysis of the nitrinergic neurons in the es...
High-resolution manometry and recently described analysis algorithms, summarized in the Chicago Clas...
SummaryAchalasia is a rare motility disorder of the oesophagus characterised by loss of enteric neur...
OBJECTIVES: Achalasia is a primary esophageal motility disorder resulting from selective loss of inh...
SummaryAchalasia is a rare motility disorder of the oesophagus characterised by loss of enteric neur...
Background and aim: It is suggested that achalasia represents an autoimmune disorder in which a trig...
Introduction: Achalasia is a primary motility disorder of the esophagus due to degeneration neurons ...
Background/Aims:Esophageal achalasia is a motility disorder of the esophagus characterized by the lo...
Copyright © 2015 J. Furuzawa-Carballeda et al. This is an open access article distributed under the ...
Achalasia is a rare disorder of the oesophageal smooth muscle characterized by impaired relaxation o...
Dysfunction of the gastrointestinal neuromuscular apparatus (including interstitial cells of Cajal) ...
BACKGROUND: Achalasia is a rare motility disorder characterized by myenteric neuron and interstitial...
BACKGROUND: Achalasia is a rare motility disorder characterized by myenteric neuron and interstitia...
Abstract Achalasia is dominated by injury to inhibi-tory nerves. As intramuscular interstitial cells...