Exams and Tests
A sliding
hiatal hernia often is diagnosed when a person is
being evaluated for another health concern. If you go to the doctor with a
feeling of burning, warmth, heat, or pain behind the breastbone (often known as
heartburn), your doctor will probably ask you
questions about your symptoms and may want to do other tests if any of the
following are true:
- You have had heartburn symptoms for a long
time.
- Your symptoms do not get better with medicine.
- Your symptoms promptly come back after medicine is stopped.
- Other serious signs or symptoms are present, such as weight loss,
vomiting of blood, or difficulty swallowing.
If you have symptoms and any of the above are true, you
probably have
gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD).
Hiatal hernia and GERD often occur together. If this
is the case, your doctor may do more specific tests to confirm a diagnosis. For
more information, see the topic
Gastroesophageal Reflux Disease (GERD).
Your doctor may find a hiatal hernia while doing a test called an
upper gastrointestinal series. This test examines the
upper and part of the middle portions of the digestive tract. After you swallow
a "shake" made of barium and water, X-rays are taken to track the movement of
the barium through the esophagus, the stomach, and the first part of the small
intestine (duodenum
) using
fluoroscopy connected to a video monitor. See a
picture of a
fluoroscopic image of a hiatal hernia
.
Upper gastrointestinal endoscopy is a procedure that
allows your doctor to look at the interior lining of your esophagus, stomach,
and duodenum by using a thin, flexible imaging instrument called an endoscope.
This procedure is commonly used to diagnose GERD.
If you have
shortness of breath or pain in the area of your breastbone, you need to make
sure it is not caused by a heart problem. The burning sensation caused by GERD
usually occurs after eating. Pain from your heart is usually felt as pressure,
heaviness, a weight, tightness, squeezing, discomfort, or a dull ache that
occurs most often after activity. To learn more about chest pain that may
indicate problems with your heart, see the topic
Chest Pain.