Literature DB >> 10391397

Novel surgical treatment and gastric pathology in diabetic gastroparesis.

N T Ejskjaer1, J L Bradley, M S Buxton-Thomas, M E Edmonds, E R Howard, T Purewal, P K Thomas, P J Watkins.   

Abstract

AIMS: Observations are made on four Type 1 diabetic patients with the rare syndrome of intractable vomiting from confirmed gastroparesis, to determine whether radical surgery would alleviate their symptoms and subsequently to examine in detail the gastric histopathology.
METHODS: The surgical approach consisted of an approximate 70% resection of the stomach, including the antrum and pylorus, with closure of the duodenum and restoration of gastrointestinal continuity with a 60-cm Roux-en-Y jejunal loop. Four longstanding Type 1 diabetic patients were examined and treated as described. They were all women in the age range 2741 years with grossly abnormal autonomic function tests in whom other causes for gastric paresis had been excluded.
RESULTS: Vomiting episodes leading to multiple hospital admissions (6-8) in the year preceding surgery were eliminated in three of the four patients, while in the fourth initial success was followed by the need for dialysis for renal failure. Gastric histopathology showed evidence of smooth muscle degeneration and fibrosis, with eosinophilic inclusion bodies (M-bodies) which appear to be unique to this condition. The findings suggest the presence of a gastromyopathy.
CONCLUSIONS: Satisfactory relief of intractable vomiting from diabetic gastroparesis was achieved by a novel radical surgical procedure. Histopathological findings suggest that gastromyopathy may contribute to the production of this syndrome.

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Year:  1999        PMID: 10391397     DOI: 10.1046/j.1464-5491.1999.00086.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Diabet Med        ISSN: 0742-3071            Impact factor:   4.359


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