Fasting and fed gastric electrical activity was recorded by cutaneous electrodes (electrogastrography) in 14 children with unexplained recurrent symptoms of upper intestinal dysfunction, and in 10 controls. The unexplained symptoms included vomiting, epigastric pain, fullness, and early satiety. Mean (SD) age was 7-0 (3) and 7 5 (2) years, respectively. Gastric emptying time of a solid-liquid meal was also measured by real time ultrasonography in all subjects (patients and controls). In all patients radiography and endoscopy excluded structural and focal abnormalities of the gastrointestinal tract. Gastric emptying time was significantly more prolonged in patients than in controls. It was also found that there were appreciable irregularities of gastric electrical rhythm (tachygastria, bradygastria, flat line pattern, and mixed arrhythmia) in 12 fasting and 10 fed patients, whereas controls showed short and rare episodes of arrhythmia during both fasting and fed recording periods. The percentage distribution of the total electrogastrographic energy power across three frequency bands of electrical activity (low, normal, and high) showed that patients were different from controls both for reduced activity of normal frequency and for increased incidence of high and low abnormal frequencies. It is concluded that gastric electrical abnormalities are found in a high proportion of children with recurrent unexplained upper gastrointestinal symptoms. Electrogastrography can be a valuable tool in the assessment of these patients.
QoL in patients with permanent stoma and in those after CAA did not differ significantly. APR patients had worse sexual function, while most CAA patients had faecal incontinence and sometime obstructed defecation, with important impact on their QoL.
We investigated the effects of age and obesity on the fasting cutaneous electrogastrogram (EGGc) by studying both young and aged, healthy men. All subjects underwent an electrogastrographic recording lasting 1 h, and frequency and power data were obtained by means of spectral analysis. In order to make a precise comparison of the data, each subject’s body mass index (BMI) was calculated and each age group was subdivided into nonobese subjects, those with a BMI of less than 24.9 kg/m2, and obese subjects, those with a BMI of more than 25 kg/m2. Comparison of the mean frequency values of the gastric spectral peak did not reveal statistically significant differences among the groups (young vs. old, nonobese vs. obese). Comparison of the mean power values of the gastric spectral peak, on the other hand, showed that there was a statistically significant reduction in spectral power in the aged subjects compared with the young (p = 0.017 in the aged vs. young nonobese subjects and p = 0.009 in the aged vs. young obese subjects), and in the obese subjects compared with the nonobese (p = 0.00021 in the young and p = 0.00029 in the aged). Frequency, therefore, is the parameter of gastric electrical activity which may best be studied by means of EGGc as it is only very slightly affected by physiological parameters, such as age and the adiposity of subjects. EGGc, therefore, could be useful in the study of those gastric diseases associated with disorders in gastric electrical rhythm and rate.
The response to carbachol and the role of nitrergic pathways differ according to age and gender; this may depend on muscarinic receptor upregulation or humoral factors affecting nitric oxide release, respectively.
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