GASTROPARESIS Arnold Wald, M.D., AGA-F University of Wisconsin School of Medicine & Public Health, Madison, WI.

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GASTROPARESIS

Arnold Wald, M.D., AGA-F

University of Wisconsin School of Medicine & Public Health, Madison, WI

MAIN FUNCTIONS OF STOMACH

I. PROXIMALFunctions: Accommodation

Storage of ingested food Regulation of intragastric

pressure Tonic movement of chyme

Motor Pattern: Tonic activity

II. DISTALFunctions: Grinding of food

Emptying to duodenumMotor Pattern: Phasic activity

B3

Pacemaker region

CorpusCorpus

FundusFundus

AntrumAntrum

PylorusPylorus

Pacemaker potentials determine contractile parameters

Pacemaker potentials determine contractile parameters

Contractile parametersMax frequency (3/min)

Propagation velocity

Propagation direction

Contractile parametersMax frequency (3/min)

Propagation velocity

Propagation direction

Motility of the Antral Pump Is Initiated by a Dominant Pacemaker in the Mid-corpusMotility of the Antral Pump Is Initiated by a Dominant Pacemaker in the Mid-corpus

The antral pump is formed by the mid and distal corpus, antrum, and pylorus

The antral pump is formed by the mid and distal corpus, antrum, and pylorus

Pacemakerpotential

B87B87

B4

% Meal remaining in stomach

% Meal remaining in stomach

Lag phaseLag phaseEmptying

phaseEmptying

phase

Onset and Rate of Gastric Emptying Varies With the Composition of the Meal

Onset and Rate of Gastric Emptying Varies With the Composition of the Meal

Time after meal (min)Time after meal (min)

Solid mealSolid meal

Liquid meal

Liquid meal

100100

7575

5050

2525

00

202000 60604040 1001008080

Semisolid meal

Semisolid meal

Gastric emptying – evolving concepts

• Relationship with symptoms unclear

– NOT nausea, vomiting or pain– Accelerating gastric emptying does not

necessarily improve symptoms– Symptomatic improvement including weight

gain is possible without improving gastric emptying

Gastroparesis is frequently overdiagnosed on the basis of outdated emptying tests

Causes of Gastroparesis

• Idiopathic 36%

• Diabetic 29%

• Upper GI surgery 13%• Parkinson’s 8%

• Collagen tissue disorder 5%

• Intestinal pseudo-obstruction 4%

• Miscellaneous (Incl eating disorders) 6%

Soykan et al, DDS 1998; 43:2398-2404

Drugs that delay gastric emptying(Partial listing)

β AgonistsAnticholinergicsTricyclic agentsPhenothiazinesDopamine agonistsOpiatesProton pump inhibitorsMiscellaneous

DexfenfluramineAntihistaminesLithium

TetrahydrocannabinolTobacco

Workup for suspected gastroparesis

UGI Series: Excludes mechanical obstruction Retention of barium w/o

obstruction is diagnostic

Endoscopy: Bezoar without obstruction highly suggestive

Gastric Emptying: Solids more sensitive than liquids

Normal values for low fat, egg white GES

Lower normal limit Upper normal limitTime for gastric retention* for gastric retention**

0.5 hr. 70%1.0 hr. 30% 90%2.0 hr. 60%4.0 hr. 10%

* Lower value suggests rapid emptying** Higher values suggest delayed emptying

Am J Gastroenterol 2008

2. A 30 y.o. woman with a one year history of type II diabetes mellitus presents with nausea and early satiety. Her blood sugars have been erratic and her last HBAIC was 9.2. Endoscopy was normal and a gastric emptying test showed 20% retention of the meal at 4 hours (normal < 10%).

Which of the following would you recommend:

• a) Metoclopramide

• b) Rigorous control of blood sugars

• c) Erythromycin

• d) Botulinum toxin injection of the pylorus

Slow gastric emptying was frequent in women with type 2 diabetes with hyperglycemia and normalized after diabetic control

J Diabetes & Complications, 2013

2. A 23 y.o. woman developed a viral illness associated with fever, myalgias, nausea, vomiting and diarrhea. Although most of her symptoms resolved over 2 weeks, she continued to have nausea, occasional retentive vomiting, early satiety and a 10 lb. weight loss. Endoscopy showed a modest amount of retained food in the stomach and a gastric retention of a test meal consisting of egg whites, toast and jam at 4 hours was 35% (normal <10%).

Which of the following would you recommend first?

a) Metoclopramide

b) Botulinum toxin injection (pylorus)

c) Erythromycin

d) Gastric stimulator

Management of Gastroparesis

Dietary ModificationsSmall frequent (6/day) mealsReduced fat (<40 gm/day)Soup, crackers, noodles, pasta,

potatoes, rice, cheeseReduced fiber helps avoid

bezoarLiquid caloric supplementation

Prokinetic Agents

• ACh-esterase inhibitors: pyridostigmine

• Motilides: erythromycin

• Antidopamine agents: domperidone*

• Antidopamine/serotonin agents:

• metoclopramide

• Serotonin agents: tegaserod*, prucalopride*

*Not available in USA

ERYTHROMYCIN

• Motilin agonist• No antiemetic effect• Stimulates antral contractions

(IV >> PO)• Stimulates MMC• Dose: 125-250 mg bid/tid (PO)

3 mg/kg q 8 hours (IV)

Metoclopramide

• Central/peripheral D2 antagonist and

5 HT agonist• Increases antral contractions• Decreases fundal relaxation• Improves antroduodenal

coordination• Dose: 5-20 mg qid (PO, IV, SQ, SL)

Metoclopramide

• 30% of patients experience side effects• 10% have neurologic side effects

Parkinson-type syndrome

Tardive dyskinesia• Hyperprolactinemia

* Boxed Warning for chronic use issued by FDA*

Domperidone

• Peripheral D2 antagonist• Increases antral contractions• Decreases fundal relaxation• Improves antroduodenal

coordination• Dose: 10-30 mg qid (PO)

Limited availability in USA

Efficacy of Domperidone in Diabetic Gastroparesis

□ Improved symptoms in 64%

□ Improved gastric emptying in 60%

□ Reduced hospital admission in 67%

□ 28 trials (19 double arm); 1016 patients

Sugumar A et al, CGH 2008

Effects of Botulinum Toxin on GE and GI Symptoms

Within Group Between Group P

Botox P Placebo P

Improved % 37.5 56.3 0.29

GCSI score -6.8 + 9.2 0.01 -10.1 + 12.7 0.01 0.42

GVAS score -190 + 228 0.01 -176 + 256 0.02 0.88

% Gastric retention 2 hr

-16.3 + 22.9 0.02 -10.8 + 20.6 0.08 0.52

% Gastric retention 4 hr

-13.3 + 18.0 0.01 -3.6 + 25.5 0.62 0.27

Friedenberg FK, et al. Am J Gastro 2008

3. A 28 y.o. man with IDDM is referred for chronic and recurrent nausea and vomiting. He reports 3-4 episodes yearly for the past 5 years with frequent ED visits or hospitalizations lasting 3-4 days. Between episodes, he feels well and has lost no weight. During these episodes, he finds great relief when taking hot showers.

The most appropriate intervention for this patient is:

• a) Domperidone 20 mg AC meals

• b) Nortriptyline in doses up to 100mg hs

• c) Discontinue smoking marijuana

• d) Strict control of blood sugars; metoclopramide 10 mg SQ during episodes

Cyclic Vomiting Syndrome

Recurrent and stereotypical episodes of severe nausea and vomiting separated by symptom free intervals

- Gastric emptying rapid or normal

- Maintenance of weight

Cannabinoid Hyperemesis

- Cyclic vomiting syndrome

- Compulsive hot water bathing

- Poor response to TCAs

Cyclic Vomiting in Adults(Non-Cannabinoid)

• Association with migraine headaches

• Psychological disorders (anxiety/depression)

• Absence of compulsive hot water bathing

• Often responds to TCAs

References

1. Hasler WL. Gastroparesis: pathogenesis, diagnosis and management. Nat Rev Gastroenterol Hepatol 2011;8:438-53. 2. Choung RS et al. Cyclic vomiting syndrome and functional vomiting in adults. Neurogastroenterol Motil 2011;24:20-26

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