OBJECTIVE -Data on the prevalence of abnormal gastric emptying in diabetic patients are still lacking. The relation between gastric emptying and dyspeptic symptoms assessed during gastric emptying measurement has not yet been investigated. The aim was to investigate the prevalence of delayed gastric emptying in a large cohort of unselected diabetic patients and to investigate the relation between gastric emptying and gastrointestinal sensations experienced in the 2 weeks before and during the test meal, prospectively.RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS -Gastric emptying was evaluated in 186 patients (106 with type 1 diabetes, mean duration of diabetes 11.6 Ϯ 11.3 years) using 100 mg 13 C-enriched octanoic acid added to a solid meal.RESULTS -Gastric emptying was significantly slower in the diabetic subjects than in the healthy volunteers (T 50 : 99.5 Ϯ 35.4 vs. 76.8 Ϯ 21.4 min, P Ͻ 0.003; Ret 120 min : 30.6 Ϯ 17.2 vs. 20.4 Ϯ 9.7%, P Ͻ 0.006). Delayed gastric emptying was observed in 51 (28%) diabetic subjects. The sensations experienced in the 2 weeks before the test were weakly correlated with the sensation scored during the gastric emptying test. Sensations assessed during the gastric emptying test did predict gastric emptying to some extent (r ϭ 0.46, P Ͻ 0.0001), whereas sensations experienced in the previous 2 weeks did not.CONCLUSIONS -This prospective study shows that delayed gastric emptying can be observed in 28% of unselected patients with diabetes. Upper gastrointestinal sensations scored during the gastric emptying tests do predict the rate of gastric emptying to some extent and sensation experienced during daily life does not. Diabetes Care 26:3116 -3122, 2003T he prevalence of delayed gastric emptying in patients with diabetes has been subject to debate for several decades. Cross-sectional studies using scintigraphic techniques to measure gastric emptying have shown delayed gastric emptying in patients with diabetes varying from 30 to 60% (1-11). However, there are several important limitations to these studies. First, the vast majority of these studies have been performed in small numbers of patients or in selected patients, which may account for the high percentage of patients showing delayed gastric emptying in some of these studies. Second, none of these studies has been performed during relative euglycemic conditions, whereas recent studies have provided evidence that hyperglycemia has a substantial effect on the rate of gastric emptying (12,13). After taking the aforementioned into account, the prevalence of delayed gastric emptying in diabetic patients who are not selected for gastrointestinal symptoms has yet to be determined.Previous studies have reported a weak association between gastric emptying and upper gastrointestinal symptoms experienced by patients in the period preceding the gastric emptying test, with the exception of the study performed by Jones et al. (10). They studied a large cohort of diabetic subjects over a period Ͼ10 years and reported that abdominal bloating and fullness were as...
Self-efficacy, one's expectations regarding the ability to perform some specific task, was studied prospectively in the adaptation process of stoma patients. One week after surgery, stoma-related self-efficacy was assessed in 59 patients (26 cancer patients and 33 patients with benign diseases) who had undergone intestinal stoma surgery. Twenty-nine items concerning self-efficacy were formulated. Factor analysis with oblique rotation resulted in two factors: a social functioning-related self-efficacy factor and a stoma care-related self-efficacy factor. Psychosocial adjustment was assessed by means of the Psychosocial Adjustment to Illness Scale (PAIS-SR) at 4 and 12 months after surgery. The PAIS-SR renders one global adjustment score and (in this study) five subscores for adjustment to specific life domains: vocational environment, domestic environment, sexual relationship, social environment, and psychological distress. In a multiple regression analysis, the relevance of self-efficacy for later adjustment was determined after partialing out the effects of relevant sociodemographic and medical factors. Strong evidence was found for the important role of self-efficacy in the process of adapting to a stoma; stronger feelings of self-efficacy shortly after the operation predicted fewer psychosocial problems in the course of the first postoperative year. Stoma care-related self-efficacy appears especially important in the first phase after surgery. Social functioning-related self-efficacy explains significant proportions of the variances in PAIS-SR total score and PAIS-SR subscores, in both the short (4 months after surgery) and long runs (12 months after surgery). If patients expect to be able to take care of their stoma, their postoperative adjustment is relatively good. By strengthening patients' self-efficacy, this adaptation process may be accelerated, and the psychological and social burden can be lightened.
Biliary lipids (bile salts, phospholipids, cholesterol, plant sterols) were determined in 89 vertebrate species (cartilaginous and bony fish, reptiles, birds, and mammals), and individual phospholipid classes were measured in 35 species. All samples contained conjugated bile salts (C 27 bile alcohol sulfates and/or N -acyl amidates of C 27 and/or C 24 bile acids). Phospholipids were generally absent in the bile of cartilaginous fish and reptiles and were present in low amounts relative to bile salts in bony fish and most birds. In mammals, the phospholipid-bile salt ratio varied widely. The bile from species with low biliary phospholipid-bile salt ratios often contained a high proportion of sphingomyelin, confirmed by HPLC-MS. In species with a high phospholipid-bile salt ratio, the predominant biliary phospholipid was phosphatidylcholine (PC). The phospholipid-bile salt ratio correlated weakly with the calculated weighted hydrophobic index value. Cholesterol was present in the bile of virtually all species, with plant sterols uniformly being present in only trace amounts. The cholesterol-bile salt ratio tended to be higher in mammals than in nonmammals, but bile of all species was unsaturated. Thus, most nonmammalian vertebrates have relatively low levels of biliary phospholipid and cholesterol, suggesting that cholesterol is eliminated predominantly as bile salts. Mammals have a higher phospholipid and cholesterol to bile salt ratio, with the dominant phospholipid being
In middle-aged inactive subjects with symptoms of chronic constipation, it is advisable to promote regular physical activity since it improves both the defecation pattern and rectosigmoid or total colonic transit time.
Small gallstones are associated with pancreatitis. Prophylactic cholecystectomy may lead to gain or loss of life-years in patients with small stones, depending on incidence and mortality of pancreatitis.
The aim of our study was to examine the prevalence of gastric myoelectrical disturbances in relation to gastrointestinal motility abnormalities in patients with functional dyspepsia, using simultaneous electrogastrography and antroduodenojejunal manometry. We carried out electrogastrography in 20 patients with functional dyspepsia and in 20 healthy volunteers. In 10 of these patients and in 10 of the volunteers antroduodenojejunal manometry was performed simultaneously. Apart from a higher postprandial power content of the 3 cycles per minute (cpm) component in the patients (1263 +/- 317 and 393 +/- 101 microV2, respectively; P = 0.016), no differences in the electrogastrographic variables were found between the groups. In the manometric part of the study, postprandial antral hypoactivity was not a prominent finding. Instead, small intestinal hyperactivity was found in the dyspeptic patients, with both a higher frequency and amplitude of the contractions (P < 0.05). This hyperactivity often consisted of bursts, which were significantly more frequent in patients than in control subjects (total duration of burst activity 25.6 +/- 6.4 and 6.0 +/- 1.7 min, respectively; P = 0.013). A positive correlation was found between the frequency of the gastric electrical control activity and the antral contraction frequency (P = 0.006), between the power content of the electrographic signal and the antral contraction amplitude (P = 0.025), and between the postprandial/fasting electrographic power ratio and the antral motility index (P = 0.007). In conclusion, gastric myoelectrical activity is minimally disturbed in patients with functional dyspepsia. Motor abnormalities, especially small intestinal hyperactivity, are more likely to play a prominent role in the genesis of dyspeptic symptoms.
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