Stomach motility disorders
Appearance
(Dysmotility of the stomach)
Normal anatomy
[edit | edit source]- Proximal stomach -> receptive relaxation, mediated by vagus nerve, when food enters. Presence of amino acids initiates a slow tonic contraction of proximal stomach, which increases the intraluminal pressure, mediating gastric emptying.
Gastric emptying studies
[edit | edit source]- Radionucleotide scan
- Nuclear scintigraphy study - meal of radiolabelled food
- Scans immediately after the meal and at 1, 2 and 4 hours
- At 4 hours, retention of 10%-15% is mild, 15-35% is moderate, and >35% is severe
- Can do it with clear liquids only to identify patients with normal solid food emptying and delayed liquid emptying
- Barium swallow with upper GI series
- May reveal mechanical causes contributing to delay
- Electrogastrogram or antroduodenal motility study
- Assesses for nerve and muscle abnormalities
- Doesn't address functional significance
- Wireless motility capsules
- Can measure pH, temperature and pressure during transit
Gastroparesis
[edit | edit source]- Background
- Syndrome of delayed gastric emptying in the absence of mechanical obstruction
- Aetiology
- Vagal damage
- Prior gastric or bariatric surgery (Roux en Y, gastric resections, anti-reflux fundoplication, pancreaticoduodenectomy)
- Chronic illness
- Diabetes (type I and II)
- Can occur both with and without insulin
- Impaired neural control via vagal nerve, myenteric nervous system, interstitial cells of Cajal, and the underlying smooth muscle
- Hyperglycaemia itself decreases contractility of the antrum and increases contractility in the pylorus
- Hyperinsulinaemia may also play a role in suppressing migrating myoelectric complex activity
- Hypothyroidism
- Neurological disease - Parkinsonism, amyloidosis, paraneoplastic disease
- Autoimmune disorders
- Diabetes (type I and II)
- Post-viral gastroparesis (look for recent viral prodrome)
- Medications
- Narcotics
- Anticholinergics
- GLP-1 inhibitors
- Mesenteric ischaemia
- Idiopathic - this is actually the most common, especially in young/middle-aged women
- Presentation
- Epigastric fullness/pain (but this is non-specific)
- Pain is often nocturnal , induced by eating, and interferes with sleep
- Early satiety, mostly to solids
- Delayed vomiting - especially if it occurs a day later, with undigested food
- Anorexia, dehydration, weight loss, malnutrition
- Epigastric fullness/pain (but this is non-specific)
- Diagnosis
- Symptoms of gastroparesis, absence of gastric outlet obstruction, and delay in gastric emptying (solids at 4 hours on scintigraphy)
- Workup
- Exclude mechanical bowel obstruction - efferent limb syndrome, anastomotic stricture, intussusception
- XRAY
- Evaluate for metabolic derangements
- Albumin takes a month to drop - consider ordering pre-albumin
- Consider gastroscopy
- If gastric reservoir is large and distended, vagal issue is unlikely - since vagus mediates distension!
- Gastric emptying studies
- Exclude mechanical bowel obstruction - efferent limb syndrome, anastomotic stricture, intussusception
- Differential diagnosis
- Gastric outlet obstruction
- Gastritis, especially secondary to H pylori
- Peptic ulcer disease
- Functional dyspepsia
- Consider gastroparesis in setting of treatment-resistant GORD
- Treatment
- Resuscitation
- Restore fluids and electrolytes
- Consider nutritional support - TPN/nasojejunal feeding tube
- Indication for NJT is unintentional weight loss >10% over 3-6 months, or repeated hospitalisations
- Obviously NJT is preferable to TPN
- Lifestyle
- Modify diet - focus on liquids (as liquid emptying is often normal), smaller and more frequent meals, low-residue diet, lower fat content. Minimise acidic and spicy foods, carbonated drinks, alcohol and tobacco.
- Medical
- Treat contributing factors, especially labile sugars in the acute setting
- Prokinetics
- Metoclopramide first-line
- Dopamine antagonist
- Stimulates antral contractions
- Decreases post-prandial fundus relaxation
- Domperidone (note that this takes effect in antrum - may not help in some patients)
- Dopamine antagonist
- Needs baseline ECG and ongoing ECGs due to prolonging of QT
- Trial if metoclopramide is not tolerated or doesn't help
- Erythromycin (IV or oral, but tachyphylaxis develops to oral)
- Motilin agents - stimulate fundal contraction
- Second-line therapy
- Azithromycin can also be used via the same mechanism
- Metoclopramide first-line
- Surgical
- Indication: refractory symptoms despite maximal medical therapy
- Pyloromyotomy/pyloroplasty - lower outflow resistance at the pylorus
- Gastric POEM - under investigation
- People have tried total gastrectomy for patients with vagal dysfunction-mediated delayed emptying, but it's very controversial
- Implantation of gastric stimulator
- Helps with n/v but do not increase emptying
- Venting gastrostomy - palliative
- Pyloric dilation and stenting could be considered in certain circumstances
- Intra-pyloric botox doesn't work
- Resuscitation
Rapid gastric emptying/dumping
[edit | edit source]- See 'gastrectomy' complications