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Simultaneous optical imaging of gastric slow waves and contractions in the in vivo porcine stomach.

Authors :
Patton, Haley N.
Zhang, Hanyu
Wood, Garrett A.
Guragain, Bijay
Nagahawatte, Nipuni D.
Nisbet, Linley A.
Cheng, Leo K.
Walcott, Gregory P.
Rogers, Jack M.
Source :
American Journal of Physiology: Gastrointestinal & Liver Physiology; Dec2024, Vol. 327 Issue 6, pG765-G782, 18p
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Gastric peristalsis is governed by electrical "slow waves" generally assumed to travel from proximal to distal stomach (antegrade propagation) in symmetric rings. Although alternative slow-wave patterns have been correlated with gastric disorders, their mechanisms and how they alter contractions remain understudied. Optical electromechanical mapping, a developing field in cardiac electrophysiology, images electrical and mechanical physiology simultaneously. Here, we translate this technology to the in vivo porcine stomach. Stomachs were surgically exposed and a fluorescent dye (di-4-ANEQ(F)PTEA) that transduces the membrane potential (V<subscript>m</subscript>) was injected through the right gastroepiploic artery. Fluorescence was excited by LEDs and imaged with one or two 256 × 256 pixel cameras. Motion artifact was corrected using a marker-based motion-tracking method and excitation ratiometry, which cancels common-mode artifact. Tracking marker displacement also enabled gastric deformation to be measured. We validated detection of electrical activation and V<subscript>m</subscript> morphology against alternative nonoptical technologies. Nonantegrade slow waves and propagation direction differences between the anterior and posterior stomach were commonly present in our data. However, sham experiments suggest they were a feature of the animal preparation and not an artifact of optical mapping. In experiments to demonstrate the method's capabilities, we found that repolarization did not always follow at a fixed time behind activation "wavefronts," which could be a factor in dysrhythmia. Contraction strength and the latency between electrical activation and contraction differed between antegrade and nonantegrade propagation. In conclusion, optical electromechanical mapping, which simultaneously images electrical and mechanical activity, enables novel questions regarding normal and abnormal gastric physiology to be explored. NEW & NOTEWORTHY: This article introduces a novel method for imaging gastric electrophysiology and mechanical function simultaneously in anesthetized, open-abdomen pigs. We demonstrate it by observing propagating slow-wave depolarization and repolarization along with the strength, spatial distribution, and direction of contractions. In addition, we observe that in this animal preparation, slow waves often do not propagate from the proximal to distal stomach and are frequently asymmetric between the anterior and posterior sides of the stomach. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01931857
Volume :
327
Issue :
6
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
American Journal of Physiology: Gastrointestinal & Liver Physiology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
181805496
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1152/ajpgi.00033.2024