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Hello GI doctors
I have an honest question about community GI setups regarding getting esophageal manometry and 24 hour pH probe Bravo studies.
As a pulmonologist I see a lot of chronic cough.
After I have gone through the checklist of asthma/COPD/bronchiectasis/structural lung disease and done all of my PFTs, FENOs, bronchoprovocation testing, and CT chests, I am often still confronted with GERD
I barium esophagrams and at times I get lucky with GERD but this is not always the case.
Once UACS is ruled out, I am confronted with GERD
These patients have usually seen a community GI and had EGD done and there might be some gastritis or intestinal metaplasia but not necessarily esophagitis.
I am often ordering hospital beds or doing discussions on intensive lifestyle modifications for these patients or trying to get them to be adherent to their PPIs (which the PCP should be doing but I digress)
The "by the book" workup next would be to evaluate for non-erosive reflux disease . But for the life of me I have never seen a community GI doctor (at least in my neck of the woods in NYC) do esophageal manometry or Bravo studies. From what I understand this is an academic GI only thing?
I mean I would assume that community GIs would refer to their academic colleagues? (Because I know leaving the profitable office for a hospital anesthesia procedure is not profitable or a good use of business time - I Try not to do bronchs and leave my office unless its clearly not something for thoracic surgery to do and it's like a TB case or sarcoidosis case and only I should do it) but this does not seem to happen in my neck of the woods.
This is not a GI bashing thread at all. I just wanted to know if community GI docs should be finding someone to treat their refractory GERD patients by arranging for these tests in a hospital endoscopy suite?
I have an honest question about community GI setups regarding getting esophageal manometry and 24 hour pH probe Bravo studies.
As a pulmonologist I see a lot of chronic cough.
After I have gone through the checklist of asthma/COPD/bronchiectasis/structural lung disease and done all of my PFTs, FENOs, bronchoprovocation testing, and CT chests, I am often still confronted with GERD
I barium esophagrams and at times I get lucky with GERD but this is not always the case.
Once UACS is ruled out, I am confronted with GERD
These patients have usually seen a community GI and had EGD done and there might be some gastritis or intestinal metaplasia but not necessarily esophagitis.
I am often ordering hospital beds or doing discussions on intensive lifestyle modifications for these patients or trying to get them to be adherent to their PPIs (which the PCP should be doing but I digress)
The "by the book" workup next would be to evaluate for non-erosive reflux disease . But for the life of me I have never seen a community GI doctor (at least in my neck of the woods in NYC) do esophageal manometry or Bravo studies. From what I understand this is an academic GI only thing?
I mean I would assume that community GIs would refer to their academic colleagues? (Because I know leaving the profitable office for a hospital anesthesia procedure is not profitable or a good use of business time - I Try not to do bronchs and leave my office unless its clearly not something for thoracic surgery to do and it's like a TB case or sarcoidosis case and only I should do it) but this does not seem to happen in my neck of the woods.
This is not a GI bashing thread at all. I just wanted to know if community GI docs should be finding someone to treat their refractory GERD patients by arranging for these tests in a hospital endoscopy suite?