Neurogastroenterology and motility : the official journal of the European Gastrointestinal Motility Society
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Neurogastroenterol. Motil. · Apr 2008
Comparative StudyComparison of mathematical methods for calculating colonic compliance in humans: power exponential, computer-based and manual linear interpolation models.
Measuring compliance allows differentiation of sensory changes from changes in thresholds because of altered compliance. As compliance of the colorectum is sigmoidal, a power exponential analysis was recommended. We aimed to develop and validate simpler measurements of compliance. ⋯ There were no gender differences in compliance measurements. Results of compliance are highly concordant amongst all models. However, computer-based or manual interpolations appear superior to power exponential models for estimating Pr10.
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Neurogastroenterol. Motil. · Apr 2008
Gastric emptying of a non-digestible solid: assessment with simultaneous SmartPill pH and pressure capsule, antroduodenal manometry, gastric emptying scintigraphy.
Gastric emptying of digestible solids occurs after trituration of food particles. Non-digestible solids are thought to empty with phase III of the migrating motor complex (MMC). The aim of this study was to determine if a non-digestible capsule given with a meal empties from the stomach with return of the fasting phase III MMC or during the fed pattern with the solid meal. ⋯ In five subjects ingesting only water, SmartPill gastric residence time (92 +/- 44 min) correlated with the time to the first phase III MMC (87 +/- 30 min; r = 0.979; P < 0.01). The non-digestible SmartPill given with a meal primarily empties from the stomach with the return of phase III MMCs occurring after emptying the solid-phase meal. However, in some subjects, the SmartPill emptied with isolated antral contractions, an unappreciated mechanism for emptying of a non-digestible solid.
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Neurogastroenterol. Motil. · Apr 2008
Reproducibility and symptomatic predictors of a slow nutrient drinking test in health and in functional dyspepsia.
Impaired accommodation to a meal has been recognized as a pathophysiological mechanism in functional dyspepsia (FD). Based on observations in tertiary care patients, the drinking test has been proposed as a non-invasive tool to estimate accommodation. Our aim was to assess the reproducibility of the drinking test and its correlation with demographic, symptomatic and pathophysiological parameters in secondary care FD patients and healthy controls. ⋯ The ingested amount depended on age, sex and baseline FD symptom score. Patients' sex, final satiety score, total score for stomach complaints at screening and total symptom score before test accounted for the total symptom score after the test. The slow nutrient drinking test confirms its possible role as an attractive non-invasive and reproducible tool for the diagnosis of impaired accommodation and for the assessment of treatment responsiveness.
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Neurogastroenterol. Motil. · Feb 2008
The hallucinogenic herb Salvia divinorum and its active ingredient salvinorin A reduce inflammation-induced hypermotility in mice.
The hallucinogenic plant Salvia divinorum has been used for medical treatments of gastrointestinal disorders. Here, we evaluated the effect of a standardized extract from the leaves of Salvia divinorum (SDE) and of its active ingredient salvinorin A on motility in vivo, both in physiological states and during croton oil-induced intestinal inflammation. SDE (1-100 mg kg(-1)) significantly inhibited motility only in inflamed, but not in control, mice. ⋯ We conclude that salvinorin A may reduce motility through activation of different targets. In physiological states, salvinorin A, at high doses, inhibited motility through a non-KOR mediated mechanism. Gut inflammation increased the potency of salvinorin A; this effect was mediated by KOR, but it was not shared by U-50488, thus suggesting that salvinorin A may have target(s) other than KOR in the inflamed gut.
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Neurogastroenterol. Motil. · Sep 2007
Long-term colonic hypersensitivity in adult rats induced by neonatal unpredictable vs predictable shock.
Our goal was to examine the relationship between early life trauma and the development of visceral hypersensitivity in later life in irritable bowel syndrome (IBS). Rat pups underwent neonatal conditioning: (i) paired odour-shock, where odour is a predictable shock signal, (ii) unpaired odour-shock, where odour is an unpredictable shock signal or (iii) control odour-only with odour presentations and handling without shock. At maturity, colorectal sensitivity was measured as a visceromotor behavioural response. ⋯ Adult responses to CRD were altered by infant experience with shock trauma. However, depending on the context of that early life trauma, there are major differences between the long-term effects of that early life trauma on colonic sensitivity compared to controls. These results strengthen the link between early life trauma and adult IBS, and suggest that unpredictable trauma is a critical factor for later life disorders.