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2.
Am J Clin Nutr ; 2024 Mar 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38452857

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Heat treatments of dairy, including pasteurization and ultra-high temperature (UHT) processing, alter milk macromolecular structures, and ultimately affect digestion. In vitro, animal, and human studies show faster nutrient release or circulating appearance after consuming UHT milk (UHT-M) compared with pasteurized milk (PAST-M), with a faster gastric emptying (GE) rate proposed as a possible mechanism. OBJECTIVES: To investigate the impact of milk heat treatment on GE as a mechanism of faster nutrient appearance in blood. We hypothesized that GE and circulating nutrient delivery following consumption would be faster for UHT-M than PAST-M. METHODS: In this double-blind randomized controlled cross-over trial, healthy female (n = 20; 27.3 ± 1.4 y, mean ± SD) habitual dairy consumers, consumed 500 mL of either homogenized bovine UHT-M or PAST-M (1340 compared with 1320 kJ). Gastric content volume (GCV) emptying half-time (T50) was assessed over 3 h by magnetic resonance imaging subjective digestive symptoms, plasma amino acid, lipid and B vitamin concentrations, and gastric myoelectrical activity were measured over 5 h. RESULTS: Although GCV T50 did not differ (102 ± 7 min compared with 89 ± 8 min, mean ± SEM, UHT-M and PAST-M, respectively; P = 0.051), GCV time to emptying 25% of the volume was 31% longer following UHT-M compared with PAST-M (42 ± 2 compared with 32 ± 4 min, P = 0.004). Although GCV remained larger for a longer duration following UHT-M (treatment × time interaction, P = 0.002), plasma essential amino acid AUC was greater following UHT-M than PAST-M (55,324 ± 3809 compared with 36,598 ± 5673 µmol·min·L-1, P = 0.006). Heat treatment did not impact gastric myoelectrical activity, plasma appetite hormone markers or subjective appetite scores. CONCLUSIONS: Contrary to expectations, GE was slower with UHT-M, yet, as anticipated, aminoacidemia was greater. The larger GCV following UHT-M suggests that gastric volume may poorly predict circulating nutrient appearance from complex food matrices. Dairy heat treatment may be an effective tool to modify nutrient release by impacting digestion kinetics. CLINICAL TRIAL REGISTRY: www.anzctr.org.au (ACTRN12620000172909).

3.
J Gastrointest Surg ; 28(3): 236-245, 2024 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38445915

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Adverse gastric symptoms persist in up to 20% of fundoplication operations completed for gastroesophageal reflux disease, causing significant morbidity and driving the need for revisional procedures. Noninvasive techniques to assess the mechanisms of persistent postoperative symptoms are lacking. This study aimed to investigate gastric myoelectrical abnormalities and symptoms in patients after fundoplication using a novel noninvasive body surface gastric mapping (BSGM) device. METHODS: Patients with a previous fundoplication operation and ongoing significant gastroduodenal symptoms and matched controls were included. BSGM using Gastric Alimetry (Alimetry Ltd) was employed, consisting of a high-resolution 64-channel array, validated symptom-logging application, and wearable reader. RESULTS: A total of 16 patients with significant chronic symptoms after fundoplication were recruited, with 16 matched controls. Overall, 6 of 16 patients (37.5%) showed significant spectral abnormalities defined by unstable gastric myoelectrical activity (n = 2), abnormally high gastric frequencies (n = 3), or high gastric amplitudes (n = 1). Patients with spectral abnormalities had higher Patient Assessment of Upper Gastrointestinal Disorders-Symptom Severity Index scores than those of patients without spectral abnormalities (3.2 [range, 2.8-3.6] vs 2.3 [range, 2.2-2.8], respectively; P = .024). Moreover, 7 of 16 patients (43.8%) had BSGM test results suggestive of gut-brain axis contributions and without myoelectrical dysfunction. Increasing Principal Gastric Frequency Deviation and decreasing Rhythm Index scores were associated with symptom severity (r > .40; P < .05). CONCLUSION: A significant number of patients with persistent postfundoplication symptoms displayed abnormal gastric function on BSGM testing, which correlated with symptom severity. Our findings advance the pathophysiologic understanding of postfundoplication disorders, which may inform diagnosis and patient selection for medical therapy and revisional procedures.


Assuntos
Esofagoplastia , Refluxo Gastroesofágico , Gastropatias , Humanos , Fundoplicatura/efeitos adversos , Refluxo Gastroesofágico/etiologia , Refluxo Gastroesofágico/cirurgia
4.
Sci Rep ; 14(1): 4842, 2024 02 28.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38418514

RESUMO

Abnormal cyclic motor pattern (CMP) activity is implicated in colonic dysfunction, but the only tool to evaluate CMP activity, high-resolution colonic manometry (HRCM), remains expensive and not widely accessible. This study aimed to validate body surface colonic mapping (BSCM) through direct correlation with HRCM. Synchronous meal-test recordings were performed in asymptomatic participants with intact colons. A signal processing method for BSCM was developed to detect CMPs. Quantitative temporal analysis was performed comparing the meal responses and motility indices (MI). Spatial heat maps were also compared. Post-study questionnaires evaluated participants' preference and comfort/distress experienced from either test. 11 participants were recruited and 7 had successful synchronous recordings (5 females/2 males; median age: 50 years [range 38-63]). The best-correlating MI temporal analyses achieved a high degree of agreement (median Pearson correlation coefficient (Rp) value: 0.69; range 0.47-0.77). HRCM and BSCM meal response start and end times (Rp = 0.998 and 0.83; both p < 0.05) and durations (Rp = 0.85; p = 0.03) were similar. Heat maps demonstrated good spatial agreement. BSCM is the first non-invasive method to be validated by demonstrating a direct spatio-temporal correlation to manometry in evaluating colonic motility.


Assuntos
Colo , Constipação Intestinal , Masculino , Feminino , Humanos , Adulto , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Motilidade Gastrointestinal/fisiologia , Manometria/métodos , Refeições
5.
Surgery ; 175(4): 1103-1110, 2024 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38245447

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Failure to rescue is the rate of death amongst patients with postoperative complications and has been proposed as a perioperative quality indicator. However, variation in its definition has limited comparisons between studies. We systematically reviewed all surgical literature reporting failure to rescue rates and examined variations in the definition of the 'numerator,' 'denominator,' and timing of failure to rescue measurement. METHODS: Databases were searched from inception to 31 December 2022. All studies reporting postoperative failure to rescue rates as a primary or secondary outcome were included. We examined the complications included in the failure to rescue denominator, the percentage of deaths captured by the failure to rescue numerator, and the timing of measurement for complications and mortality. RESULTS: A total of 359 studies, including 212,048,069 patients, were analyzed. The complications included in the failure to rescue denominator were reported in 295 studies (82%), with 131 different complications used. The median number of included complications per study was 10 (interquartile range 8-15). Studies that included a higher number of complications in the failure-to-rescue denominator reported lower failure-to-rescue rates. Death was included as a complication in the failure to rescue the denominator in 65 studies (18%). The median percentage of deaths captured by the failure to rescue calculation when deaths were not included in the denominator was 79%. Complications (52%) and mortality (40%) were mostly measured in-hospital, followed by 30-days after surgery. CONCLUSION: Failure to rescue is an important concept in the study of postoperative outcomes, although its definition is highly variable and poorly reported. Researchers should be aware of the advantages and disadvantages of different approaches to defining failure to rescue.


Assuntos
Complicações Pós-Operatórias , Humanos , Complicações Pós-Operatórias/epidemiologia , Complicações Pós-Operatórias/etiologia , Mortalidade Hospitalar , Estudos Retrospectivos
6.
Am J Gastroenterol ; 119(2): 331-341, 2024 Feb 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37782524

RESUMO

INTRODUCTION: Gastric emptying testing (GET) assesses gastric motility, however, is nonspecific and insensitive for neuromuscular disorders. Gastric Alimetry (GA) is a new medical device combining noninvasive gastric electrophysiological mapping and validated symptom profiling. This study assessed patient-specific phenotyping using GA compared with GET. METHODS: Patients with chronic gastroduodenal symptoms underwent simultaneous GET and GA, comprising a 30-minute baseline, 99m TC-labelled egg meal, and 4-hour postprandial recording. Results were referenced to normative ranges. Symptoms were profiled in the validated GA App and phenotyped using rule-based criteria based on their relationships to the meal and gastric activity: (i) sensorimotor, (ii) continuous, and (iii) other. RESULTS: Seventy-five patients were assessed, 77% female. Motility abnormality detection rates were as follows: GET 22.7% (14 delayed, 3 rapid), GA spectral analysis 33.3% (14 low rhythm stability/low amplitude, 5 high amplitude, and 6 abnormal frequency), and combined yield 42.7%. In patients with normal spectral analysis, GA symptom phenotypes included sensorimotor 17% (where symptoms strongly paired with gastric amplitude, median r = 0.61), continuous 30%, and other 53%. GA phenotypes showed superior correlations with Gastroparesis Cardinal Symptom Index, Patient Assessment of Upper Gastrointestinal Symptom Severity Index, and anxiety scales, whereas Rome IV Criteria did not correlate with psychometric scores ( P > 0.05). Delayed emptying was not predictive of specific GA phenotypes. DISCUSSION: GA improves patient phenotyping in chronic gastroduodenal disorders in the presence and absence of motility abnormalities with increased correlation with symptoms and psychometrics compared with gastric emptying status and Rome IV criteria. These findings have implications for the diagnostic profiling and personalized management of gastroduodenal disorders.


Assuntos
Duodenopatias , Gastroparesia , Humanos , Feminino , Masculino , Esvaziamento Gástrico/fisiologia , Gastroparesia/diagnóstico por imagem , Cintilografia
7.
J Clin Med ; 12(20)2023 Oct 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37892572

RESUMO

Chronic gastroduodenal symptoms are prevalent worldwide, and there is a need for new diagnostic and treatment approaches. Several overlapping processes may contribute to these symptoms, including gastric dysmotility, hypersensitivity, gut-brain axis disorders, gastric outflow resistance, and duodenal inflammation. Gastric Alimetry® (Alimetry, New Zealand) is a non-invasive test for evaluating gastric function that combines body surface gastric mapping (high-resolution electrophysiology) with validated symptom profiling. Together, these complementary data streams enable important new clinical insights into gastric disorders and their symptom correlations, with emerging therapeutic implications. A comprehensive database has been established, currently comprising > 2000 Gastric Alimetry tests, including both controls and patients with various gastroduodenal disorders. From studies employing this database, this paper presents a systematic methodology for Gastric Alimetry test interpretation, together with an extensive supporting literature review. Reporting is grouped into four sections: Test Quality, Spectral Analysis, Symptoms, and Conclusions. This review compiles, assesses, and evaluates each of these aspects of test assessment, with discussion of relevant evidence, example cases, limitations, and areas for future work. The resultant interpretation methodology is recommended for use in clinical practice and research to assist clinicians in their use of Gastric Alimetry as a diagnostic aid and is expected to continue to evolve with further development.

8.
Colorectal Dis ; 25(11): 2257-2265, 2023 11.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37800177

RESUMO

AIM: Faecal incontinence is common and of multifactorial aetiologies, yet current diagnostic tools are unable to assess nerve and sphincter function objectively. We developed an anorectal high-density electromyography (HD-EMG) probe to evaluate motor-evoked potentials induced via trans-sacral magnetic stimulation (TSMS). METHOD: Anorectal probes with an 8 × 8 array of electrodes spaced 1 cm apart were developed for recording HD-EMG of the external anal sphincter. These HD-EMG probes were used to map MEP amplitudes and latencies evoked via TSMS delivered through the Magstim Rapid2 (MagStim Company). Patients undergoing pelvic floor investigations were recruited for this IDEAL Stage 2a pilot study. RESULTS: Eight participants (median age 49 years; five female) were recruited. Methodological viability, safety and diagnostic workflow were established. The test was well tolerated with median discomfort scores ≤2.5/10, median pain scores ≤1/10 and no adverse events. Higher Faecal Incontinence Severity Index scores correlated with longer MEP latencies (r = 0.58, p < 0.001) and lower MEP amplitudes (r = -0.32, p = 0.046), as did St. Mark's Incontinence Scores with both MEP latencies (r = 0.49, p = 0.001) and MEP amplitudes (r = -0.47, p = 0.002). CONCLUSION: This HD-EMG probe in conjunction with TSMS presents a novel diagnostic tool for anorectal function assessment. Spatiotemporal assessment of magnetically stimulated MEPs correlated well with symptoms and offers a feasible, safe and patient-tolerable method of evaluating pudendal nerve and external anal sphincter function. Further clinical development and evaluation of these techniques is justified.


Assuntos
Incontinência Fecal , Humanos , Feminino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Eletromiografia/efeitos adversos , Incontinência Fecal/etiologia , Diafragma da Pelve , Projetos Piloto , Potenciais Evocados , Canal Anal , Fenômenos Magnéticos
9.
J Psychosom Res ; 175: 111516, 2023 12.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37832277

RESUMO

OBJECTIVE: Cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) is increasingly used to manage Disorders of Gut-Brain Interaction (DGBIs). This systematic review aimed to review the evidence for the effectiveness of CBT-based interventions for patients with gastroduodenal DGBIs. METHODS: Medline, Embase, PubMed, Cochrane Central, and Scopus were searched in July 2022. Studies were included if they investigated the effects of a CBT-based intervention on gastrointestinal symptoms and/or psychological outcomes pre- and post-intervention in patients with gastroduodenal DGBIs. Case studies, studies not in English, and studies with patients under 18 years were excluded. Results were synthesised narratively, and standardised effect sizes were calculated where possible. RESULTS: Nine studies (seven RCTs and two pre/post studies) were identified, with data reported in 10 articles (total N = 602). The studies investigated patients with functional dyspepsia (n = 7), rumination syndrome (n = 1), and supragastric belching (n = 1). The studies had heterogeneous interventions, methodologies, and outcomes, precluding meta-analysis, as well as a moderate-high risk of bias and high drop-outs rates. Findings demonstrated decreased gastrointestinal symptoms and improved anxiety, depression, and quality of life, from pre- to post-intervention, with medium to large effect sizes for symptoms and small to large effect sizes for psychological outcomes. Efficacy was maintained at follow-up, up to one year later. CONCLUSIONS: This review suggests promising evidence that CBT effectively improves gastrointestinal symptoms and psychological outcomes in patients with gastroduodenal DGBIs. However, heterogeneity, risk of bias, and lack of statistical reporting were noted, indicating the need for more robust research and standardisation.


Assuntos
Terapia Cognitivo-Comportamental , Psicoterapia , Adolescente , Humanos , Transtornos de Ansiedade/terapia , Encéfalo , Terapia Cognitivo-Comportamental/métodos , Psicoterapia/métodos , Qualidade de Vida
10.
Sci Rep ; 13(1): 14987, 2023 09 11.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37696955

RESUMO

Electrogastrography (EGG) non-invasively evaluates gastric motility but is viewed as lacking clinical utility. Gastric Alimetry® is a new diagnostic test that combines high-resolution body surface gastric mapping (BSGM) with validated symptom profiling, with the goal of overcoming EGG's limitations. This study directly compared EGG and BSGM to define performance differences in spectral analysis. Comparisons between Gastric Alimetry BSGM and EGG were conducted by protocolized retrospective evaluation of 178 subjects [110 controls; 68 nausea and vomiting (NVS) and/or type 1 diabetes (T1D)]. Comparisons followed standard methodologies for each test (pre-processing, post-processing, analysis), with statistical evaluations for group-level differences, symptom correlations, and patient-level classifications. BSGM showed substantially tighter frequency ranges vs EGG in controls. Both tests detected rhythm instability in NVS, but EGG showed opposite frequency effects in T1D. BSGM showed an 8× increase in the number of significant correlations with symptoms. BSGM accuracy for patient-level classification was 0.78 for patients vs controls and 0.96 as compared to blinded consensus panel; EGG accuracy was 0.54 and 0.43. EGG detected group-level differences in patients, but lacked symptom correlations and showed poor accuracy for patient-level classification, explaining EGG's limited clinical utility. BSGM demonstrated substantial performance improvements across all domains.


Assuntos
Diabetes Mellitus Tipo 1 , Humanos , Estudos Retrospectivos , Estômago , Mapeamento Potencial de Superfície Corporal , Consenso
11.
Front Psychol ; 14: 1232871, 2023.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37637892

RESUMO

Background: Chronic gastroduodenal disorders including, chronic nausea and vomiting syndrome, gastroparesis, and functional dyspepsia, are challenging to diagnose and manage. The diagnostic and treatment pathways for these disorders are complex, costly and overlap substantially; however, experiences of this pathway have not been thoroughly investigated. This study therefore aimed to explore clinician and patient perspectives on the current clinical pathway. Methods: Semi-structured interviews were conducted between June 2020 and June 2022 with 11 patients with chronic nausea and vomiting syndrome alone (based on Rome IV criteria) and nine gastroenterologists who treat these conditions. Interviews were recorded, transcribed, and thematically analyzed using a reflexive, iterative, inductive approach. Five key patient themes were identified: (1) the impacts of their chronic gastroduodenal symptoms, (2) the complexity of the clinical journey, (3) their interactions with healthcare providers, (4) the need for advocacy, and (5) their experience of treatments. Five key clinician themes were also identified: (1) these conditions were seen as clinically complex, (2) there is an uncertain and variable clinical pathway, (3) the nuance of investigations, (4) these conditions were difficult to therapeutically manage, and (5) there are barriers to developing a therapeutic relationship. Conclusion: Findings indicate that both patients and clinicians are dissatisfied with the current clinical care pathways for nausea and vomiting syndromes. Recommendations included the development of more clinically relevant and discriminant tests, standardization of the diagnostic journey, and the adoption of a multidisciplinary approach to diagnosis and treatment.

12.
medRxiv ; 2023 May 25.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37292604

RESUMO

Objectives: Gastric emptying testing (GET) assesses gastric motility, however is non-specific and insensitive for neuromuscular disorders. Gastric Alimetry® (GA) is a new medical device combining non-invasive gastric electrophysiological mapping and validated symptom profiling. This study assessed patient-specific phenotyping using GA compared to GET. Methods: Patients with chronic gastroduodenal symptoms underwent simultaneous GET and GA, comprising a 30-minute baseline, 99m TC-labelled egg meal, and 4-hour postprandial recording. Results were referenced to normative ranges. Symptoms were profiled in the validated GA App and phenotyped using rule-based criteria based on their relationships to the meal and gastric activity: i) sensorimotor; ii) continuous; and iii) other. Results: 75 patients were assessed; 77% female. Motility abnormality detection rates were: GET 22.7% (14 delayed, 3 rapid); GA spectral analysis 33.3% (14 low rhythm stability / low amplitude; 5 high amplitude; 6 abnormal frequency); combined yield 42.7%. In patients with normal spectral analysis, GA symptom phenotypes included: sensorimotor 17% (where symptoms strongly paired with gastric amplitude; median r=0.61); continuous 30%; other 53%. GA phenotypes showed superior correlations with GCSI, PAGI-SYM, and anxiety scales, whereas Rome IV Criteria did not correlate with psychometric scores (p>0.05). Delayed emptying was not predictive of specific GA phenotypes. Conclusions: GA improves patient phenotyping in chronic gastroduodenal disorders in the presence and absence of motility abnormalities with improved correlation with symptoms and psychometrics compared to gastric emptying status and Rome IV criteria. These findings have implications for the diagnostic profiling and personalized management of gastroduodenal disorders. Study Highlights: 1) WHAT IS KNOWN Chronic gastroduodenal symptoms are common, costly and greatly impact on quality of lifeThere is a poor correlation between gastric emptying testing (GET) and symptomsGastric Alimetry® is a new medical device combining non-invasive gastric electrophysiological mapping and validated symptom profiling 2) WHAT IS NEW HERE Gastric Alimetry generates a 1.5x higher yield for motility abnormalities than GETWith symptom profiling, Gastric Alimetry identified 2.7x more specific patient categories than GETGastric Alimetry improves clinical phenotyping, with improved correlation with symptoms and psychometrics compared to GET.

14.
Am J Physiol Gastrointest Liver Physiol ; 325(1): G62-G79, 2023 07 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37162180

RESUMO

Patients with irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) have recurrent lower abdominal pain, associated with altered bowel habit (diarrhea and/or constipation). As bowel habit is altered, abnormalities in colonic motility are likely to contribute; however, characterization of colonic motor patterns in patients with IBS remains poor. Utilizing fiber-optic manometry, we aimed to characterize distal colonic postprandial colon motility in diarrhea-predominant IBS. After an overnight fast, a 72-sensor (spaced at 1-cm intervals) manometry catheter was colonoscopically placed to the proximal colon, in 13 patients with IBS-D and 12 healthy adults. Recordings were taken for 2 h pre and post a 700 kcal meal. Data were analyzed with our two developed automated techniques. In both healthy adults and patients with IBS-D, the dominant frequencies of pressure waves throughout the colon are between 2 and 4 cycles per minute (cpm) and the power of these frequencies increased significantly after a meal. Although these pressure waves formed propagating contractions in both groups, the postprandial propagating contraction increase was significantly smaller in patients compared with healthy adults. In healthy adults during the meal period, retrograde propagation between 2 and 8 cpm was significantly greater than antegrade propagation at the same frequencies. This difference was not observed in IBS-D. Patients with IBS-D show reduced prevalence of the retrograde cyclic motor pattern postprandially compared with the marked prevalence in healthy adults. We hypothesize that this reduction may allow premature rectal filling, leading to postprandial urgency and diarrhea.NEW & NOTEWORTHY Compared with healthy adults this study has shown a significant reduction in the prevalence of the postprandial retrograde cyclic motor pattern in the distal colon of patients with diarrhea-predominant irritable bowel syndrome. We hypothesize that this altered motility may allow for premature rectal filling which contributes to the postprandial urgency and diarrhea experienced by these patients.


Assuntos
Síndrome do Intestino Irritável , Adulto , Humanos , Colo , Constipação Intestinal , Diarreia , Reto , Período Pós-Prandial , Motilidade Gastrointestinal
15.
Ann Surg ; 278(1): 87-95, 2023 Jul 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35920564

RESUMO

OBJECTIVE: To examine variation in "failure to rescue" (FTR) as a driver of differences in mortality between centres and over time for patients undergoing colorectal cancer surgery. BACKGROUND: Wide variation exists in postoperative mortality following colorectal cancer surgery. FTR has been identified as an important determinant of variation in postoperative outcomes. We hypothesized that differences in mortality both between hospitals and over time are driven by variation in FTR. METHODS: A national population-based study of patients undergoing colorectal cancer resection from 2010 to 2019 in Aotearoa New Zealand was conducted. Rates of 90-day FTR, mortality, and complications were calculated overall, and for surgical and nonoperative complications. Twenty District Health Boards (DHBs) were ranked into quartiles using risk- and reliability-adjusted 90-day mortality rates. Variation between DHBs and trends over the 10-year period were examined. RESULTS: Overall, 15,686 patients undergoing resection for colorectal adenocarcinoma were included. Increased postoperative mortality at high-mortality centers (OR 2.4, 95% CI 1.8-3.3) was driven by higher rates of FTR (OR 2.0, 95% CI 1.5-2.8), and postoperative complications (OR 1.4, 95% CI 1.3-1.6). These trends were consistent across operative and nonoperative complications. Over the 2010 to 2019 period, postoperative mortality halved (OR 0.5, 95% CI 0.4-0.6), associated with a greater improvement in FTR (OR 0.5, 95% CI 0.4-0.7) than complications (OR 0.8, 95% CI 0.8-0.9). Differences between centers and over time remained when only analyzing patients undergoing elective surgery. CONCLUSION: Mortality following colorectal cancer resection has halved over the past decade, predominantly driven by improvements in "rescue" from complications. Differences in FTR also drive hospital-level variation in mortality, highlighting the central importance of "rescue" as a target for surgical quality improvement.


Assuntos
Neoplasias Colorretais , Complicações Pós-Operatórias , Humanos , Reprodutibilidade dos Testes , Mortalidade Hospitalar , Complicações Pós-Operatórias/etiologia , Neoplasias Colorretais/cirurgia , Estudos Retrospectivos
16.
Dis Colon Rectum ; 66(4): 579-590, 2023 04 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35499821

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Postoperative ileus results in morbidity, prolonged hospitalization, and increased health care expenditure. However, the underlying abnormalities in motility remain poorly understood. Recent high-resolution manometry studies demonstrated that the distal colon becomes hyperactive with a cyclic motor pattern postoperatively, but they did not track this activity beyond 16 hours after surgery. OBJECTIVE: This study used high-resolution manometry to evaluate distal colonic motility during the first 4 days after right-sided colectomy. DESIGN: An observational study of perioperative high-resolution colonic manometry using a 36-sensor catheter with 1-cm resolution. SETTING: A single tertiary hospital. PATIENTS: Adult patients undergoing elective laparoscopic or open right-sided colonic resection. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Occurrence of distal colonic motor patterns during the perioperative period, defined according to a published classification system. Clinical markers of gut recovery included time to first stool, oral diet, and prolonged postoperative ileus. RESULTS: Seven patients underwent perioperative manometry recordings. Hyperactive cyclic motor patterns emerged intraoperatively and peaked in the first 12 hours postoperatively, occupying 81.8% ± 3.9% of the recording. This gradually returned to normal during the first 4 days, reaching 19.0% ± 4.4% ( p = 0.002). No patient had a bowel movement before this hyperactivity resolved. High-amplitude propagating sequences were absent in early postoperative recordings, and their return temporally correlated with the passage of stool. Abnormal high-amplitude repetitive 0.5 to 1 cycle per minute activity was observed in the left colon of 1 patient with prolonged ileus. LIMITATIONS: The invasive nature of recordings limited this study to a small sample size. CONCLUSIONS: Cyclic motor patterns are markedly hyperactive in the distal colon after right-sided colectomy and resolve during the first 4 postoperative days. High-amplitude propagating sequences are inhibited by surgery and gradually recover. Bowel function may not return until these changes resolve. Other abnormal repetitive hyperactive patterns could contribute to the development of prolonged ileus. See Video Abstract at http://links.lww.com/DCR/B967 . MOTILIDAD HIPERACTIVA DEL COLON DISTAL Y PATRONES DE RECUPERACIN DESPUS DE COLECTOMA DERECHA UN ESTUDIO DE MANOMETRA DE ALTA RESOLUCIN: ANTECEDENTES:El íleo post-operatorio produce una morbilidad significativa, una hospitalización prolongada y un aumento del gasto sanitario. Sin embargo, las anomalías subyacentes en la motilidad siguen siendo poco conocidas. Estudios recientes de manometría de alta resolución demostraron que el colon distal se vuelve hiperactivo con un patrón motor cíclico en el post-operatorio, pero no registraron esta actividad más allá de las 16 horas posteriores a la cirugía.OBJETIVO:Utilizar la manometría de alta resolución para evaluar la motilidad del colon distal durante los primeros cuatro días después de la colectomía del lado derecho.DISEÑO:Estudio observacional de pacientes sometidos a manometría colónica perioperatoria de alta resolución mediante catéter de 36 sensores con 1 cm de resolución.AJUSTE:Un solo hospital terciario.PACIENTES:Pacientes adultos sometidos a resección laparoscópica o abierta de colon del lado derecho de forma electiva.PRINCIPALES MEDIDAS DE RESULTADO:AAparición de patrones motores del colon distal durante el período perioperatorio, definidos según un sistema de clasificación publicado. Los marcadores clínicos de recuperación intestinal incluyeron, tiempo hasta la primera evacuación, dieta oral e íleo posoperatorio prolongado.RESULTADOS:Siete pacientes fueron sometidos a registros de manometría perioperatoria. Los patrones motores cíclicos hiperactivos emergieron intraoperatoriamente y alcanzaron su punto máximo en las primeras 12 horas post-operatorias, ocupando 81,8 ± 3,9% del registro. Esto volvió gradualmente a la normalidad durante los primeros cuatro días, alcanzando el 19,0 ± 4,4% (p = 0,002). Ningún paciente tuvo una evacuación intestinal antes de que se resolviera esta hiperactividad. Las secuencias de propagación de alta amplitud estaban ausentes en las grabaciones post-operatorias tempranas y su retorno se correlacionó temporalmente con el paso de las heces. Se observó actividad anormal de alta amplitud repetitiva de 0,5-1 ciclo / minuto en el colon izquierdo de un paciente con íleo prolongado.LIMITACIONES:La naturaleza invasiva de las grabaciones limitó este estudio a un tamaño de muestra pequeño.CONCLUSIONES:Los patrones motores cíclicos son marcadamente hiperactivos en el colon distal después de la colectomía del lado derecho y se resuelven gradualmente durante los primeros cuatro días posoperatorios. Las secuencias de propagación de gran amplitud se inhiben mediante cirugía y se recuperan gradualmente. Es posible que la función intestinal no regrese hasta que estos cambios se resuelvan. Otros patrones hiperactivos repetitivos anormales podrían contribuir al desarrollo de íleo prolongado. Consulte Video Resumen en http://links.lww.com/DCR/B967 . (Traducción-Dr. Mauricio Santamaria ).


Assuntos
Colectomia , Íleus , Adulto , Humanos , Estudos Retrospectivos , Colectomia/efeitos adversos , Colectomia/métodos , Complicações Pós-Operatórias/diagnóstico , Complicações Pós-Operatórias/epidemiologia , Íleus/diagnóstico , Íleus/etiologia , Colo/cirurgia
17.
Neurogastroenterol Motil ; 35(2): e14418, 2023 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35699340

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Disorders of gastric function are highly prevalent, but diagnosis often remains symptom-based and inconclusive. Body surface gastric mapping is an emerging diagnostic solution, but current approaches lack scalability and are cumbersome and clinically impractical. We present a novel scalable system for non-invasively mapping gastric electrophysiology in high-resolution (HR) at the body surface. METHODS: The system comprises a custom-designed stretchable high-resolution "peel-and-stick" sensor array (8 × 8 pre-gelled Ag/AgCl electrodes at 2 cm spacing; area 225 cm2 ), wearable data logger with custom electronics incorporating bioamplifier chips, accelerometer and Bluetooth synchronized in real-time to an App with cloud connectivity. Automated algorithms filter and extract HR biomarkers including propagation (phase) mapping. The system was tested in a cohort of 24 healthy subjects to define reliability and characterize features of normal gastric activity (30 m fasting, standardized meal, and 4 h postprandial). KEY RESULTS: Gastric mapping was successfully achieved non-invasively in all cases (16 male; 8 female; aged 20-73 years; BMI 24.2 ± 3.5). In all subjects, gastric electrophysiology and meal responses were successfully captured and quantified non-invasively (mean frequency 2.9 ± 0.3 cycles per minute; peak amplitude at mean 60 m postprandially with return to baseline in <4 h). Spatiotemporal mapping showed regular and consistent wave activity of mean direction 182.7° ± 73 (74.7% antegrade, 7.8% retrograde, 17.5% indeterminate). CONCLUSIONS AND INFERENCES: BSGM is a new diagnostic tool for assessing gastric function that is scalable and ready for clinical applications, offering several biomarkers that are improved or new to gastroenterology practice.


Assuntos
Motilidade Gastrointestinal , Estômago , Humanos , Masculino , Feminino , Reprodutibilidade dos Testes , Motilidade Gastrointestinal/fisiologia , Estômago/fisiologia , Eletrodos , Eletrônica
18.
Neurogastroenterol Motil ; 35(3): e14491, 2023 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36409749

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Electrogastrography (EGG) non-invasively evaluates gastric function but has not achieved common clinical adoption due to several technical limitations. Body Surface Gastric Mapping (BSGM) has been introduced to overcome these limitations, but pitfalls in traditional metrics used to analyze spectral data remain unaddressed. This study critically evaluates five traditional EGG metrics and introduces improved BSGM spectral metrics, with validation in a large cohort. METHODS: Pitfalls in five EGG metrics were assessed (dominant frequency, percentage time normogastria, amplitude, power ratio, and instability coefficient), leading to four revised BSGM spectral metrics. Traditional and revised metrics were compared to validate performance using a standardized 100-subject database of BSGM tests (30 min baseline; 4-h postprandial) recorded using Gastric Alimetry® (Alimetry). KEY RESULTS: BMI and amplitude were highly correlated (r = -0.57, p < 0.001). We applied a conservative BMI correction to obtain a BMI-adjusted amplitude metric (r = -0.21, p = 0.037). Instability coefficient was highly correlated with both dominant frequency (r = -0.44, p < 0.001), and percent bradygastria (r = 0.85, p < 0.001), in part due to misclassification of low frequency transients as gastric activity. This was corrected by introducing distinct gastric frequency and stability metrics (Principal Gastric Frequency and Gastric Alimetry Rhythm Index (GA-RI)TM ) that were uncorrelated (r = 0.14, p = 0.314). Only 28% of subjects showed a maximal averaged amplitude within the first postprandial hour. Calculating Fed:Fasted Amplitude Ratio over a 4-h postprandial window yielded a median increase of 0.31 (IQR 0-0.64) above the traditional ratio. CONCLUSIONS & INFERENCES: The revised metrics resolve critical pitfalls impairing the performance of traditional EGG, and should be applied in future BSGM spectral analyses.


Assuntos
Jejum , Estômago , Humanos , Estômago/fisiologia , Eletromiografia , Jejum/fisiologia , Período Pós-Prandial , Eletrofisiologia , Esvaziamento Gástrico/fisiologia
19.
Neurogastroenterol Motil ; 34(12): e14489, 2022 12.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36371709

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Gastroduodenal symptoms are highly prevalent, with underlying sensorimotor dysfunction contributing in many patients. Common symptoms include early satiation, postprandial fullness, epigastric bloating, pain or burning, nausea and vomiting, which collectively affect over 7% of adults. However, the clinical evaluation of these symptoms remains challenging, with current tests of gastric function remaining limited in their ability or availability to separate specific patient subgroups or guide-targeted care. PURPOSE: In the current edition of Neurogastroenterology & Motility, Silver et al. present new data showing correlations between patterns of intragastric meal distribution and symptom profiles in a large series of patients undergoing gastric emptying scintigraphy. Studies of this type are important, as they motivate understanding beyond existing disease labels, and orient focus toward deeper mechanistic profiling. This brief review provides an overview of gastric sensorimotor function and profiles several current and emerging methods of clinical evaluation. Perspectives are provided on accommodation testing, gastric emptying, measuring gastric myoelectrical activity including new approaches, and antroduodenal manometry. Although gastric physiology is complex, recent progress has been encouraging, with the heterogenous pathophysiology of gastric symptoms continuing to be unraveled, and new techniques for evaluating gastric function and symptoms emerging. CONCLUSIONS AND INFERENCES: Ongoing progress will now depend on continuing to accurately profile the underlying mechanisms of gastroduodenal disorders to identify specific disease phenotypes that inform care.


Assuntos
Dispepsia , Gastropatias , Humanos , Esvaziamento Gástrico/fisiologia , Náusea , Manometria
20.
Sci Transl Med ; 14(663): eabq3544, 2022 Sep 21.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36130019

RESUMO

Chronic nausea and vomiting syndromes (NVSs) are prevalent and debilitating disorders. Putative mechanisms include gastric neuromuscular disease and dysregulation of brain-gut interaction, but clinical tests for objectively defining gastric motor function are lacking. A medical device enabling noninvasive body surface gastric mapping (BSGM) was developed and applied to evaluate NVS pathophysiology. BSGM was performed in 43 patients with NVS and 43 matched controls using Gastric Alimetry (Alimetry), a conformable high-resolution array (8 × 8 electrodes; 20-mm interelectrode spacing), wearable reader, and validated symptom-logging app. Continuous measurement encompassed a fasting baseline (30 minutes), 482-kilocalorie meal, and 4-hour postprandial recording, followed by spectral and spatial biomarker analyses. Meal responses were impaired in NVS, with reduced amplitudes compared to controls (median, 23.3 microvolts versus 38.0 microvolts, P < 0.001), impaired fed-fasting power ratios (1.1 versus 1.6, P = 0.02), and disorganized slow waves (spatial frequency stability, 13.6 versus 49.5; P < 0.001). Two distinct NVS subgroups were evident with indistinguishable symptoms (all P > 0.05). Most patients (62%) had normal BSGM studies with increased psychological comorbidities (43.5% versus 7.7%; P = 0.03) and anxiety scores (median, 16.5 versus 13.0; P = 0.035). A smaller subgroup (31%) had markedly abnormal BSGM, with biomarkers correlating with symptoms (nausea, pain, excessive fullness, early satiety, and bloating; all r > 0.35, P < 0.05). Patients with NVS share overlapping symptoms but comprise distinct underlying phenotypes as revealed by a BSGM device. These phenotypes correlate with symptoms, which should inform clinical management and therapeutic trial design.


Assuntos
Esvaziamento Gástrico , Náusea , Esvaziamento Gástrico/fisiologia , Humanos , Estômago , Síndrome , Vômito
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