1. Pathophysiology of Gastroparesis Syndromes Includes Anatomic and Physiologic Abnormalities
- Author
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William R. Kennedy, Thomas L. Abell, Endashaw Omer, Ed Miller, Abigail Stocker, Christina Pinkston, Archana Kedar, Karen Beatty, Lindsay McElmurray, Leila Gobejishvili, Michael Griswold, Xiu Yang, Mostafa Fraig, Michael G. Hughes, Gwen Wendelschafer-Crabb, and Hani Rashed
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Abdominal pain ,Gastroparesis ,Physiology ,Gastroenterology ,03 medical and health sciences ,symbols.namesake ,0302 clinical medicine ,Electrogastrogram ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Multiple abnormalities ,Gastric emptying ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Syndrome ,Middle Aged ,Hepatology ,medicine.disease ,Pathophysiology ,Interstitial cell of Cajal ,Gastric Emptying ,Gastric Mucosa ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,symbols ,Female ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,Inflammation Mediators ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
Factors underlying gastroparesis are not well defined. We hypothesized that multiple systems may be involved in patients with gastroparesis symptoms and performed a comparative physiologic study. We studied 43 consecutive eligible patients with gastroparetic symptoms categorized by GI symptoms, metabolic status, illness quantification, and gastric physiology. Patients were evaluated by two methods in each of five core areas: inflammatory, autonomic, enteric, electrophysiologic, and hormonal with abnormalities examined by correlations. Patients had similar GI symptoms regardless of baseline gastric emptying or diabetic/idiopathic status, and all patients demonstrated abnormalities in each of the 5 areas studied. Nearly all patients presented with elevated markers of serum TNFα (88%) and serum IL-6 (91%); elevated cutaneous electrogastrogram frequency (95%); and interstitial cells of Cajal count abnormalities (inner: 97%, outer: 100%). Measures of inflammation correlated with a number of autonomic, enteric anatomy, electrophysiologic and hormonal abnormalities. We conclude that patients with the symptoms of gastroparesis have multiple abnormalities, when studied by traditional, as well as newer, diagnostic assessments. Inflammation appears to be a fundamental abnormality that affects other organ systems in symptomatic patients. Future work on gastroparetic syndromes and their treatment may benefit from a focus on the diffuse nature of their illness, diverse pathophysiologic mechanisms involved, especially the possible causes of underlying inflammation and disordered hormonal status. This study is registered with Clinicaltrials.gov under study # NCT03178370 https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT03178370 .
- Published
- 2020