Introduction
Body surface gastric mapping (BSGM) is a new non-invasive test of gastric function. BSGM offers several novel and improved biomarkers of gastric function capable of differentiating patients with overlapping symptom-profiles. The aim of this study was to define normative reference intervals for BSGM spectral metrics in a population of healthy controls.
Methods
BSGM was performed in healthy controls using Gastric Alimetry (Alimetry, New Zealand) comprising a stretchable high-resolution array (8x8 electrodes; 196 cm2), wearable Reader, and validated symptom-logging App. The evaluation encompassed a fasting baseline (30 min), 482 kCal meal, and 4-hr postprandial recording. Normative reference intervals were calculated for BSGM metrics including the Principal Gastric Frequency, Gastric Alimetry Rhythm Index (GA-RI; a measure of the concentration of power in the gastric frequency band over time), BMI-adjusted amplitude (microvolt), and fed:fasted amplitude ratio (ff-AR). Data are reported as median and reference interval (5th and/or 95th percentiles).
Results
110 subjects (55% female, median age 32 (IQR 24 - 50), median BMI 23.8 kg/m2 (IQR 21.4 - 26.9)) were included. The median Principal Gastric Frequency was 3.04 cpm; reference interval: 2.65 - 3.35 cpm. Median GA-RI was 0.50; reference interval: >=0.25. Median BMI-adjusted amplitude was 37.6 microvolts; reference interval: 20-70 microvolts. The median ff-AR was 1.85; reference interval >=1.08. Higher BMI was associated with a shorter meal-response duration (p=0.014).
Conclusions
This study provides normative reference intervals for BSGM spectral data that will be used in clinical practice to inform diagnostic interpretations of abnormal gastric function.