The patients with CRF showed gastric hypomotility, including impaired gastric myoelectrical activity and delayed gastric emptying. Gastric hypomotility appears to be an important factor in the generation of GI symptoms in patients with CRF.
Background: Gastrointestinal (GI) symptoms are common in patients with chronic renal failure (CRF). We have previously demonstrated that patients with predialysis endstage renal disease showed a high prevalence of GI symptoms and gastric hypomotility, and that gastric hypomotility appears to be an important factor in generating GI symptoms. However, it is not clear whether impaired gastric motor function would improve after hemodialytic treatment. Aims: To examine the relationship between gastric motor function and GI symptoms in CRF patients on hemodialysis. Methods: The study was performed in 19 patients with CRF treated with hemodialysis for more than six months and in 12 matched healthy controls. GI symptom severity was quantified in all patients. Gastric motility was evaluated with cutaneously recorded electrogastrography (EGG) and gastric emptying of semi-solid meals using the 13 C-acetic acid breath test. Results: Six patients had no symptoms, and 11 had slight GI symptoms with a total symptom score of less than 5. Compared with controls, CRF patients revealed no differences in gastric motility parameters, with the exception of a lower percentage of normogastria in EGG at fasting state. Eleven patients had normal gastric motor function (Group A), and eight showed abnormalities of either gastric myoelectrical activity or gastric emptying (Group B). There was no difference in symptom score between Group A and Group B. Conclusions: More than half of the patients with CRF on hemodialysis demonstrated normal gastric motility, and no or slight GI symptoms. Hemodialytic treatment may improve impaired gastric motility and reduce GI symptoms in patients with CRF.
The effects of trimebutine maleate (TM), a prokinetic drug, on gastrointestinal motility in patients with gastric ulcer were investigated. Twenty patients with active gastric ulcers were allocated to two groups; 10 patients received a proton pump inhibitor alone (PPI group), given orally, and 10 patients received oral TM in combination with a PPI (PPI + TM group), each for a period of 8 weeks. Electrogastrography (EGG) and gastric emptying were measured before and after the treatment period. During the active ulcer stage, tachygastria (more than 0.06 Hz) or bradygastria (less than 0.04 Hz) in the EGG frequency were observed in 9 patients either before or after meals. During the healed ulcer stage, tachygastria or bradygastria was observed in 4 of 10 patients in the PPI group, while in the PPI + TM group, 1 patient had tachygastria and none had bradygastria. Postprandial dip (PD) was observed in 3 of the 20 patients during the active stage, while after treatment, PD was observed in 3 patients in the PPI group and in 6 patients in the PPI + TM group, respectively. Gastric emptying in the PPI group did not show any change between before and after treatment, while that in the PPI + TM group improved significantly after treatment. These results suggest that TM may have an ameliorative effect on abnormal gastric motility in patients with gastric ulcer.
The existence of abnormal gastric motility in gastric ulcer disease remains controversial. The aim of this study was to characterize gastric motility in patients with recurrent gastric ulcers. Studies were performed in 10 control subjects and in 24 patients with recurrent active gastric ulcer disease as diagnosed by gastrointestinal endoscopy. Gastric motility was evaluated by cutaneous electrogastrography (EGG) and by gastric semi-liquid meal emptying. The EGG was recorded before and after ingestion of a test meal containing 20 mg/kg of acetaminophen. Patients with a dominant EGG frequency of greater than 0.06 Hz were defined as tachygastria, while those with a frequency of less than 0.04 Hz were defined as bradygastria. A transient frequency decrease, called postprandial dip (PD), was identified visually. The degree of gastric emptying was determined from the serum acetaminophen concentration 45 minutes after the meal. Control subjects showed no irregularity in their dominant EGG frequency in either fasting or postprandial states. PD was observed in 8 control subjects. In patients presenting with active gastric ulcers, abnormal patterns in the dominant EGG frequency (either as tachygastria or bradygastria) were observed in 14 of the 24 patients when fasting and in 15 of them in the postprandial state. After successful treatment, the number of patients with abnormal patterns in their dominant EGG frequency remained unchanged, while PD was observed in 11 patients. No significant difference was observed in the EGG power ratio as a result of successful treatment. Gastric emptying was significantly delayed compared with controls in both the active and healed stages. These findings suggest that abnormal gastric motility, including gastric electrical abnormalities and delayed gastric emptying, plays an important role in the pathophysiology of recurrent gastric ulcers.
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