Medical Terms
Medical terms
A brief glossary of medical terms related to gastroparesis.
Abdomen: |
Often called the belly section of the body between the chest and pelvis. Contains many parts of the digestive tract (e.g. stomach, small intestine, and large intestine). |
Anorexia: |
Lack or loss of appetite for food. Not to be confused with Anorexia Nervosa—a clinically diagnosable eating disorder. |
Antiemetic drugs: |
Used to help with symptoms of nausea and vomiting. |
Belching /eructation (burping): |
Voiding of gas through the mouth. |
Bloating: |
Feeling of abdominal distension or fullness. Feeling as if one’s belly is swollen. |
Chronic: |
Persisting or recurring over a long period. |
Distension: |
Enlargement or ballooning effect, such as the feeling as if one’s belly is swollen. |
Dyspepsia: |
Persistent or recurrent abdominal pain or discomfort centred in the upper abdomen. |
Dysphagia: |
Sensation of food or liquid sticking to the esophagus (muscular tube connecting your mouth to your stomach). |
Early satiety: |
A feeling that the stomach is over-filled soon after starting to eat. |
Functional disorder: |
A disorder of brain-gut interaction. Any condition in which an organ or part of the body does not work the way it is supposed to, in the absence of blockage, inflammation or cancer. |
Globus: |
The sensation of a lump in the throat. |
Halitosis: |
An unpleasant odour from the mouth. |
Heartburn: |
A burning feeling in the lower chest. |
Idiopathic: |
A disease or condition with an unknown cause or origin. |
Nausea: |
A sensation of needing to vomit. |
Motility: |
Contractions of the muscles of the digestive tract and movement of its contents. |
Odynophagia: |
Pain in the chest as food or drink passes through the esophagus. |
Postprandial fullness: |
Feeling of unusual fullness after a meal. |
Prokinetic drugs: |
Used to improve gastric motility. |
Regurgitation: |
Return of stomach contents into the throat or mouth. |
Vomiting: |
Ejection of matter from the stomach through the mouth. |