Literature DB >> 15181137

Radionuclide gastroesophageal motor studies.

Giuliano Mariani1, Giuseppe Boni, Marco Barreca, Massimo Bellini, Bruno Fattori, Abedallatif AlSharif, Mariano Grosso, Cristina Stasi, Francesco Costa, Marco Anselmino, Santino Marchi, Domenico Rubello, H William Strauss.   

Abstract

Disorders of the upper digestive tract have a high impact on modern society, in terms of both direct and indirect health care costs and of social burden. The most common presenting symptom is either dysphagia or dyspepsia. Discriminating specific diagnoses within this wide group of diseases requires sound clinical judgment and application of procedures to distinguish organic from nonorganic disease and to further characterize the functional or motility disturbance of nonorganic diseases. Non-radionuclide-based diagnostic techniques include both noninvasive tests (upper gastrointestinal barium series, ultrasonography, and breath test for gastric emptying) and invasive procedures (fiberoptic endoscopy, esophagogastroduodenoscopy, pharyngeal manometry, stationary esophageal manometry, 24-h pH monitoring, esophageal biliary reflux monitoring, multichannel intraluminal impedance, and electrogastrography). Some of these techniques are not well tolerated by patients or not widely available. Radionuclide transit/emptying scintigraphy provides a means of characterizing exquisite functional abnormalities with a set of low-cost procedures that are easy to perform and widely available, entail a low radiation burden, closely reflect the physiology of the tract under evaluation, are well tolerated and require minimum cooperation by patients, and provide quantitative data for better intersubject comparison and for monitoring response to therapy. Despite the relatively low degree of standardization both in the scintigraphic technique per se and in image processing, these methods have shown excellent diagnostic performance in several function or motility disorders of the upper digestive tract. Dynamic scintigraphy with a radioactive liquid or semisolid bolus provides important information on both the oropharyngeal and the esophageal phases of swallowing, thus representing a useful complement or even a valid alternative to conventional invasive tests (such as stationary esophageal manometry) for evaluating abnormalities of oropharyngoesophageal transit. Clinical applications of esophageal transit scintigraphy include disorders such as nutcracker esophagus, esophageal spasm, noncardiac chest pain of presumed esophageal origin, achalasia, esophageal involvement of scleroderma, and gastroesophageal reflux and monitoring of response to therapy (either medical or surgical treatment of disease-for example, organic disease such as esophageal cancer). Scintigraphy with a radiolabeled test meal represents the gold standard for evaluating gastric emptying, whereas more recent radionuclide methods include dynamic antral scintigraphy and gastric SPECT for assessing gastric accommodation. Clinical applications of gastric-emptying scintigraphy include, among others, evaluation of patients with dyspepsia and evaluation of gastric function in various systemic diseases affecting gastric emptying. The present review includes the proposal of clinical algorithms for evaluating patients with the main disorders of the upper digestive tract. These algorithms, originally derived from available literature, have been developed on the basis of a vast clinical experience in conjunction with the specialists more deeply involved in the care of patients with such disorders (medical and surgical gastroenterologists and nuclear medicine physicians). The role of radionuclide gastroesophageal motor studies is clearly identified in the various steps of patients' management, from the initial diagnostic approach to functional characterization to postoperative follow-up or monitoring of medical therapy.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15181137

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Nucl Med        ISSN: 0161-5505            Impact factor:   10.057


  21 in total

1.  Effects of adjustable gastric bands on gastric emptying, supra- and infraband transit and satiety: a randomized double-blind crossover trial using a new technique of band visualization.

Authors:  Paul Robert Burton; Kenneth Yap; Wendy A Brown; Cheryl Laurie; Matthew O'Donnell; Geoff Hebbard; Victor Kalff; Paul E O'Brien
Journal:  Obes Surg       Date:  2010-12       Impact factor: 4.129

Review 2.  Imaging of the gastrointestinal tract-novel technologies.

Authors:  Jens Brøndum Frøkjaer; Asbjørn Mohr Drewes; Hans Gregersen
Journal:  World J Gastroenterol       Date:  2009-01-14       Impact factor: 5.742

Review 3.  Esophageal transit scintigraphy in children: a user's guide and pictorial review.

Authors:  Asha Sarma; Frederick D Grant; Neha S Kwatra
Journal:  Pediatr Radiol       Date:  2018-12-07

4.  Effects of anatomical position on esophageal transit time: a biomagnetic diagnostic technique.

Authors:  Teodoro Cordova-Fraga; Modesto Sosa; Carlos Wiechers; Jose-Maria De la Roca-Chiapas; Alejandro Maldonado Moreles; Jesus Bernal-Alvarado; Raquel Huerta-Franco
Journal:  World J Gastroenterol       Date:  2008-10-07       Impact factor: 5.742

5.  Is PET always an advantage versus planar and SPECT imaging?

Authors:  Giuliano Mariani; Laura Bruselli; Adriano Duatti
Journal:  Eur J Nucl Med Mol Imaging       Date:  2008-08       Impact factor: 9.236

6.  Effects of metoclopramide on gastric motility measured by short-term bio-impedance.

Authors:  María-Raquel Huerta-Franco; Miguel Vargas-Luna; Kathleen M Capaccione; Etna Yañez-Roldán; Ulises Hernández-Ledezma; Ismael Morales-Mata; Teodoro Córdova-Fraga
Journal:  World J Gastroenterol       Date:  2009-10-14       Impact factor: 5.742

7.  Effect of psychological stress on gastric motility assessed by electrical bio-impedance.

Authors:  María Raquel Huerta-Franco; Miguel Vargas-Luna; Juana Berenice Montes-Frausto; Ismael Morales-Mata; Lorena Ramirez-Padilla
Journal:  World J Gastroenterol       Date:  2012-09-28       Impact factor: 5.742

8.  Joint SNMMI and EANM guideline for small-bowel and colon transit: an important step towards long-awaited standardization.

Authors:  Giuliano Mariani; Italia Paglianiti
Journal:  Eur J Nucl Med Mol Imaging       Date:  2014-03       Impact factor: 9.236

9.  Clinical applications of oro-pharyngo-oesophageal scintigraphy in the study of dysphagia.

Authors:  B Fattori; M Grosso; F Ursino; F Matteucci; V Mancini; E Rizza; V Mattone; G Mariani; A Nacci
Journal:  Acta Otorhinolaryngol Ital       Date:  2007-08       Impact factor: 2.124

10.  Does hypothyroidism affect gastrointestinal motility?

Authors:  Olga Yaylali; Suna Kirac; Mustafa Yilmaz; Fulya Akin; Dogangun Yuksel; Nese Demirkan; Beyza Akdag
Journal:  Gastroenterol Res Pract       Date:  2010-03-07       Impact factor: 2.260

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