Purpose:To determine the effect of the right decubitus lying body position (RP) on relevant parameters of human gastric motor function in healthy volunteers.
Materials and Methods:Postprandial gastric function after ingestion of a solid/liquid meal (150 g/150 mL) was assessed over 90 minutes in volunteers in the RP and seated position (SP). Ten healthy volunteers were imaged using two MRI systems that differed in architecture and field strength. Stomach and intragastric air volume, intragastric meal distribution, gastric emptying, and gastric peristalsis were compared between the RP and SP.Results: Body position did not affect gastric relaxation (RP, 372 mL vs. SP, 384 mL) and initial gastric volumes (stomach: RP, 458 mL vs. SP, 462 mL; meal: RP, 377 mL vs. SP, 399 mL; intragastric air: RP, 110 mL vs. SP, 98 mL). Postprandial stomach volume and gastric activity (RP and SP, 3.1 minute -1 ) were also similar. Meal emptying showed different characteristics, resulting in a significant but small difference in meal volume of -43 mL at t ϭ 90 minutes (P Ͻ 0.05).
Conclusion:Gastric MRI in RP is feasible for clinical research assessing gastric motor function. The subtle difference in meal emptying may be induced by posture-dependent vagal activity. This study confirms that MRI is a highly sensitive imaging technique for assessing gastrointestinal function in humans. MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGING (MRI) has been established as a valuable technique in human gastrointestinal (GI) research for analyzing gastric function (1-4). In comparison with radionuclide and ultrasound imaging methods, MRI offers improved spatial and temporal image resolution, and thus is ideal for noninvasive and reliable assessment of GI physiology (5). It will therefore play an important role in GI research and clinical diagnosis in the future (6,7).The most common body position during and following meal ingestion is sitting; however, the horizontally aligned whole-body architecture of modern high-field MRI systems restricts measurements of organ function to the lying body position. Several studies using ␥-scintigraphy (8 -12), intraluminal manometry (9), and MRI (13) have shown that posture influences gastric function, and thus may present a limitation for gastric MRI. In those studies, however, gastric emptying was analyzed only at discrete time points, and peristaltic motility was determined as antropyloroduodenal pressure events. Differences in the gastric emptying rate and the number of antropyloric contraction waves were detected between the lying and seated positions. Because of the very different measurement principles involved (i.e., radioactive decay vs. hydrostatic pressure vs. MR), scintigraphy and manometry data are not directly comparable with data derived using MRI. To evaluate gastric MRI for its use in clinical research and diagnosis of GI pathophysiology, one must simultaneously investigate gastric emptying, stomach volume, intragastric meal distribution, and gastric peristalsis in the lying position and detect differences compared to th...