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Delayed gastric emptying occurs in up to 50% of patients after truncal vagotomy and Roux-Y antrectomy and is often resistant to nonsurgical therapy. This study evaluates the effect of erythromycin, metoclopramide, and motilin on delayed gastric emptying in four dogs after Roux-Y antrectomy. Solid food gastric emptying was measured using a radionuclide technique. Study groups were: (1) saline control; (2) erythromycin 1 mg/kg intravenously over 1 hour; (3) erythromycin 3 mg/kg by mouth 45 minutes prior to feeding; (4) metoclopramide 0.6 mg/kg intravenously over 1 hour; and (5) motilin 500 ng/kg intravenously over 1 hour. After Roux-Y antrectomy, saline control dogs had 73% +/- 5% (SEM) gastric retention at 2 hours. After intravenous and oral erythromycin, gastric emptying improved at 2 hours to 27% +/- 6% and 39% +/- 5% (p less than 0.01 compared with control). Erythromycin intravenously and by mouth improved gastric emptying compared with metoclopramide (64% +/- 8%, p less than 0.05). Motilin enhanced gastric emptying to a similar degree as erythromycin, with a 2-hour gastric retention of 37% +/- 4% (NS). Erythromycin improved gastric emptying in dogs with severe Roux-Y gastroparesis and may have clinical application.
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PMID:Erythromycin enhances delayed gastric emptying in dogs after Roux-Y antrectomy. 198 56

A prospective multifactorial study of symptoms and disturbance of gastrointestinal function has been undertaken in 50 patients with non-ulcer dyspepsia. Objective tests including solid meal gastric emptying studies, gastric acid secretion, E-HIDA scintiscan for enterogastric bile reflux, and hydrogen breath studies were carried out in all patients and validated against control data. Gastroscopy and biopsy were carried out in non-ulcer dyspepsia patients only. Non-ulcer dyspepsia patients were categorised on the basis of predominant symptoms as: dysmotility-like dyspepsia (n = 22); essential dyspepsia (n = 14), gastro-oesophageal reflux-like dyspepsia (n = 11); and ulcer-like dyspepsia (n = 3). In the total non-ulcer dyspepsia population, solid meal gastric emptying was delayed (T50 mean (SEM) = 102 (6) minutes (patients) v 64 (6) minutes (controls), (p less than 0.01) and high incidences of gastritis (n = 26) and Helicobacter pyloridis infection (n = 18) were found. An inverse correlation was observed between solid meal gastric emptying and fasting peak acid output (r = -0.4; p less than 0.01). Indeed gastric emptying was particularly prolonged in eight patients (T50 mean (SEM) = 139 (15) minutes) with hypochlorhydria. In the non-ulcer dyspepsia population oral to caecal transit time of a solid meal was delayed (mean SEM = 302 (14) minutes (patients) v 244 (12) minutes (controls) (p less than 0.01]. Seven patients had a dual peak of breath hydrogen suggestive of small bowel bacterial overgrowth. No association was observed between symptoms and any of the objective abnormalities. This multifactorial study has shown that hypomotility, including gastroparesis and delayed small bowel transit, is common in non-ulcer dyspepsia and may be related to other disorders of gastrointestinal function. No relation between symptoms and disorders of function, however, has been shown.
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PMID:Evidence for hypomotility in non-ulcer dyspepsia: a prospective multifactorial study. 201 18

Symptoms of severe nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, and frequent bezoars, as well as objective gastric retention, can occur following Roux-Y biliary diversion for alkaline reflux gastritis. Medical therapy and prokinetic drugs have proven ineffective. This review evaluates 37 patients who underwent further gastric resection from 1979 to 1987 to improve gastric emptying and resolve symptoms. Fifteen patients underwent perioperative radionuclide solid-food gastric emptying studies. Seventy-three per cent (27 of 37 patients) of the patients who underwent further gastric resection (70% to 95%) had a satisfactory postoperative response. Twenty patients were graded Visick 1 or 2 and 7 Visick-3 patients, although much improved, still had some symptoms of gastroparesis. Twenty-seven per cent (10 of 37 patients) failed to improve and underwent completion total gastrectomy. Overall, 70% of this group had almost complete resolution of their symptoms. Three of 10 patients were considered "failures" due to postprandial pain in 1 and early vasomotor dumping in 2. Of the 10 patients who failed initial revisional surgery, 7 underwent a 70% to 80% subtotal gastric resection (STG) and 3 patients underwent 85% to 95% extensive resection (EXT.G.). Of the 15 patients who underwent perioperative radionuclide evaluation, a mean two-hour gastric retention of 61.4% +/- 4% (SEM) decreased to 25% +/- 4% following further gastric resection. Eight patients were in the STG group and seven patients were in the EXT.G group. Following STG, mean two-hour gastric retention of 58.2% +/- 3.5% decreased to 38% +/- 3% (p less than 0.05). In seven patients who underwent EXT.G, mean two-hour retention of 65% +/- 4% decreased to 10% +/- 2.5% (p less than 0.005). EXT.G resulted in normal gastric emptying and few late failures. In post-Roux-Y patients with symptoms of gastroparesis and documented gastric retention, EXT.G normalizes gastric emptying and restores a better quality of life. Total gastrectomy should be reserved for those patients who are failed by more extensive resection.
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PMID:The surgical treatment of chronic gastric atony following Roux-Y diversion for alkaline reflux gastritis. 273 Jan 85

Eight patients with postprandial hypotension and orthostatic hypotension were treated with the somatostatin analogue SMS-201-995. Low doses of this drug (0.2-0.4 microgram/kg) raised the blood pressure after breakfast in all six patients with postprandial hypotension. 60 min after breakfast the mean sitting blood pressure was 35 +/- 10 (SEM) mm Hg higher after administration of SMS-201-995 0.4 microgram/kg than after placebo (p less than 0.001). Larger doses (up to 1.6 micrograms/kg) raised upright blood pressure during the postprandial period in five of seven patients. Before therapy three patients were unable to stand after eating; after an injection of SMS-201-995 0.8 microgram/kg at the beginning of breakfast they were able to walk for 35-100 min. The duration of therapeutic effect of each injection was 3-6 h. Treatment was followed by abdominal cramps and nausea in two patients with gastroparesis diabeticorum. SMS-201-995 holds promise as a treatment for postprandial hypotension and orthostatic hypotension.
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PMID:Treatment of autonomic neuropathy with a somatostatin analogue SMS-201-995. 287 21

Gastric stasis and duodenogastric reflux have each been implicated in the pathogenesis of various upper gastrointestinal disorders. However, the relationship between intragastric bile and gastric emptying has not been explored. In each of nine healthy volunteers (seven men and two women, ages 22-47 years), gastric emptying of 300 ml 10% dextrose labeled with [99mTc]DTPA was measured twice using gamma camera imaging. During one study, 20 min after ingestion of the test meal, 525 mg of freeze-dried, sterilized human T-tube bile dissolved in 20 ml water was introduced into the stomach via a previously sited fine-bore nasogastric tube. Intragastric bile salt concentrations were calculated to be within the range 1.7-2.9 mM. In control studies, 20 ml of water alone was similarly introduced. Emptying at 20 min was comparable for both groups of studies (38 +/- 3% vs 39 +/- 4%; mean values +/- SEM). For each individual study, emptying from 20 to 60 min was well represented by a single exponential function (r = 0.81-0.99). Half-emptying times for curves fitted over this period were similar in the two groups (bile: T1/2 = 18.8 +/- 2.6 min; control T1/2 = 18.8 +/- 1.9 min). These results indicate that intragastric bile, in concentrations similar to those found in patients with gastric ulcer, has no effect on gastric emptying of dextrose in normal subjects.
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PMID:Intragastric bile does not perturb gastric emptying of liquids in humans. 334 20

Orocoecal transit time was studied by means of a hydrogen (H2) breath test after a standard meal in patients with peptic disease before and during treatment with ranitidine, in patients with gastric achlorhydria, and in healthy acid-secreting volunteers. Treatment with ranitidine prolonged the orocoecal transit time in patients with peptic disease from 201.9 +/- 18.3 (SEM) to 242.3 +/- 18.3 min (p less than 0.05). Also in patients with achlorhydria, the orocoecal transit time was prolonged (276.2 +/- 20.3 min), compared to the control group of healthy acid-secreting volunteers (213.5 +/- 15.7 min), (p less than 0.05). The orocoecal transit time did not correlate with gastric bacterial concentrations in the groups investigated, nor with the subjects' age. It was not correlated to the pH in the gastric juice of acid-secreting individuals, either with or without treatment. As gastric emptying was not evaluated in this study, it is impossible to state whether gastric stasis or inhibited small bowel motility, or both, cause the delayed transit in achlorhydria and during treatment with ranitidine. We suggest that the reduction of gastric juice volume could be the cause.
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PMID:The effect of gastric secretion on orocoecal transit time measured with the hydrogen (H2) breath test. 359 Aug 93

Recognition of early phases of diabetic gastroparesis is hampered by the absence of characteristic symptoms and practicable detection systems in clinical practice. Hence, a new procedure estimating phase III activity of the interdigestive migrating motor complex by monitoring gastric emptying of an undigestible marker particle by means of a metal detector was evaluated in 40 diabetic patients (13 type I, 27 type II diabetes) and 14 non-diabetic controls. Simultaneously, orocecal transit of fluids was measured by the hydrogen breath test. Gastric emptying of a solid marker was significantly delayed in diabetics as compared with controls (112.5 +/- 8.6 vs 51.2 +/- 6.8 minutes, M +/- SEM, p < 0.05). Of the diabetics investigated 77.5% had delayed gastric emptying but only 22.5% of those were clinically symptomatic as assessed by a standardized questionnaire. Gastric emptying velocity did not correlate significantly with age, length of diabetes, neuropathy, blood glucose and orocecal transit of fluids. We conclude that determination of gastric emptying time of undigestible marker particles by means of a sensitive metal detector appears to be a clinically promising and easy to perform method to detect early phases of diabetic gastroparesis.
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PMID:[Early diagnosis of diabetic gastroparesis]. 775 16

We studied the effect of erythromycin on gastric emptying in nine patients with gastroparesis following truncal vagotomy and antrectomy, and assessed their clinical response to chronic oral erythromycin. Gastric emptying was evaluated using a solid-phase radio-labeled meal. Patients were studied after erythromycin 200 mg intravenously (N = 9) and after an oral suspension of erythromycin 200 mg (N = 7) each given 15 min after ingestion of the meal. Three parameters of gastric emptying were analyzed: half-emptying time (T1/2), area under the curve, and percent gastric residual at 2 hr. Nine patients were subsequently placed on oral suspension erythromycin 150 mg three times a day before meals (range 125-250 mg three times a day) and symptoms of nausea, vomiting, postprandial fullness, and abdominal pain were assessed before and after erythromycin. Intravenous erythromycin markedly accelerated the gastric emptying (all three parameters studied) of solids (P < 0.01) in seven of nine patients with postsurgical gastroparesis [baseline T1/2 154 +/- 15 min; after intravenous erythromycin, T1/2 56 +/- 17 min (mean +/- SEM)]. Oral erythromycin enhanced (P < 0.05) the gastric emptying rate (T1/2, area under the curve) in five of seven patients (baseline T1/2 146 +/- 16 min; after oral erythromycin, T1/2 87 +/- 20 min). Of the nine patients who were placed on oral maintenance erythromycin, three showed clinical improvement after two weeks. In summary, erythromycin significantly enhances gastric emptying in many patients with vagotomy and antrectomy-induced gastroparesis; however, only a small subset of patients respond clinically to chronic oral erythromycin.
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PMID:Erythromycin enhances gastric emptying in patients with gastroparesis after vagotomy and antrectomy. 795 94

The use of a stapling instrument (TA90) to effect a transection of the anterior gastric wall with posterior truncal vagotomy but preserving innervation to the anterior wall of the antrum for duodenal ulcer is described. The operation resulted in the endoscopic healing of all the ulcers; however, recurrent ulceration was seen in 3 of 25 patients. Basal acid output was reduced from 7.84 (SEM 1.73) to 3.49 (SEM 1.15) mmol/h (t = 2.09, df = 15.7, p = 0.05), while peak acid output was reduced from 38.67 (SEM 3.11) to 19.26 (SEM 2.3) mmol/h (t = 5.01, df = 23.9, p = 0.0000). Solid and liquid gastric emptying studies were performed, and while some delay in solid emptying was seen, only one patient complained of transient gastric stasis. Endoscopic Congo red staining was performed postoperatively and a tongue of innervated mucosa along the lesser curve was seen in each case. The procedure was easily and rapidly performed, and early clinical results are good, with 25 of 30 patients having a good (Visick I) result.
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PMID:Posterior truncal vagotomy and stapling of the anterior stomach wall in 30 patients with duodenal ulcer: acid inhibition, gastric emptying, and endoscopic dye spraying. Prospects for endoscopic vagotomy. 826 Dec 65

Malnutrition in dialysis patients is of multifactorial etiology and is associated with greatly increased morbidity and mortality. A low serum albumin level is one of the most powerful predictors of death and may persist despite optimization of the dialysis prescription. We retrospectively reviewed our experience in improving nutrition in nondiabetic patients with unexplained hypoalbuminemia. Using radionuclide solid-phase gastric emptying scans, we identified 6 patients who had occult gastroparesis. These patients (one on hemodialysis and five on peritoneal dialysis) were then treated with prokinetic medications (erythromycin elixir or metoclopramide) selected on the basis of their effectiveness in improving the scanning results after being given intravenously. Gastric emptying half-times improved from a median of 122 minutes (range, 95 to >300 minutes; normal, < or = 90 minutes) to 12 +/- 2 minutes (mean +/- SEM). The serum albumin increased from 3.3 +/- 0.04 g/dL to 3.7 +/- 0.08 g/dL at 3 months, with every patient's value higher than 3.5 g/dL. This improvement was statistically significant (P = 0.008) over the 5-month period of observation, which encompassed the 2 months before and 3 months after treatment. There was a linear improvement (P = 0.008) that showed a quadratic trend (P = 0.078) for a plateau at the final sampling point. The serum blood urea nitrogen, creatinine, and hematocrit levels remained unchanged (P > 0.1). We conclude that gastric emptying scans are valuable in identifying occult gastroparesis in high-risk patients and can guide the selection of prokinetic therapy, which may significantly increase serum albumin levels.
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PMID:Improved nutrition after the detection and treatment of occult gastroparesis in nondiabetic dialysis patients. 942 53


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