1989
DOI: 10.1136/gut.30.2.152
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Gastric emptying in marathon runners.

Abstract: SUMMARY Radionuclide gastric emptying studies using 99m-Tc human serum albumin egg omelette have been carried out in 10 long distance runners at rest and during a 90 minute run at sustained speed. Resting values are compared with controls comprising 10 sedentary subjects. Runners show a significantly accelerated basal gastric emptying (runners tl/2=67-7 (5 9) min; sedentaries tl/2=85 3 (4'5) min, p Show more

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Cited by 52 publications
(35 citation statements)
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“…For the present study, we used a small amount of solid meal to stimulate the vagal nerve activity and examine its involvement, since a meal with high-energy content would suppress vagal nerve activity [21]. The small solid meal might further be supported by knowledge that gastric motility is more responsive in subjects that underwent exercise training rather than in sedentary subjects [22]. As a result, although activities of the cardiac vagal nerve and gastric motility were both enhanced after the ingestion of a meal, the exercise with a meal condition resulted in decreased HF component and increased gastric myoelectrical activity, which was also the result under the exercise with no meal condition.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For the present study, we used a small amount of solid meal to stimulate the vagal nerve activity and examine its involvement, since a meal with high-energy content would suppress vagal nerve activity [21]. The small solid meal might further be supported by knowledge that gastric motility is more responsive in subjects that underwent exercise training rather than in sedentary subjects [22]. As a result, although activities of the cardiac vagal nerve and gastric motility were both enhanced after the ingestion of a meal, the exercise with a meal condition resulted in decreased HF component and increased gastric myoelectrical activity, which was also the result under the exercise with no meal condition.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Gastric emptying rates of solids were measured with an isotopic method described previously [11,12]. In summary, after an 8-h fast, each subject ingested a test meal consisting of a sandwich with a one-egg omelette (white bread 50 g; egg 50 g; olive oil 5 g) and 200 ml of orange juice.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Ten studies utilised cycling as the mode of exercise [29, 42, 45, 49, 58-60, 65, 66, 68], two utilised running [47,69], five utilised walking [62-64, 70, 71] and the remaining studies compared modes of exercise (one running/walking [43] and two running/cycling [61,67]). …”
Section: Participant Characteristics and Exercisementioning
confidence: 99%