BACKGROUND: The aim of this study is to clarify whether laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy (LSG) to treat morbid obesity causes changes in gastric emptying. METHODS: Gastric emptying scintigraphy was performed before and 3 months after LSG, in 21 consecutive morbidly obese patients. After an overnight fast, subjects consumed a standard semi-solid meal, to which 0.5 mCi Tc99-labeled sulfur colloid had been added. The meal was consumed within 10 min. Scintigraphic imaging was performed with a gamma camera immediately after the completion of the meal as well as after 30, 60, 120, 180, and 240 min. Quantitative and qualitative analysis was performed by drawing a region of interest (ROI) enclosing the stomach on the anterior and the posterior images. Time 0 was considered the time of meal completion (all the ingested activity) and was defined as 100% retention. The same ROI was used on all consecutive images of the same projection for the same patient. The geometric mean of the anterior and the posterior counts for each time point is calculated and corrected for Tc(99m) decay. Gastric emptying curves were constructed. T 1/2 is the time interval between completion of the meal and the point at which half of the meal (by radioactivity counts) has left the stomach. Retention is expressed as the percent remaining in the stomach at each time point (half, 1, 2, 3, 4 h). RESULTS: The mean T 1/2 raw data was 62.39+/-19.83 and 56.79+/-18.72 min (p=0.36, t=-0.92, NS) before and 3 months after LSG, respectively. The T 1/2 linear was 103.64+/-9.82 and 106.92+/-14.55, (p=0.43, t=-0.43, NS), and the linear fit slope 0.48+/-0.04 and 0.47+/-0.05 (p=0.48, t=0.7, NS). CONCLUSIONS: LSG with antrum preservation as performed in this series has no effect on gastric emptying.
BACKGROUND: The aim of this study is to clarify whether laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy (LSG) to treat morbid obesity causes changes in gastric emptying. METHODS: Gastric emptying scintigraphy was performed before and 3 months after LSG, in 21 consecutive morbidly obesepatients. After an overnight fast, subjects consumed a standard semi-solid meal, to which 0.5 mCi Tc99-labeled sulfur colloid had been added. The meal was consumed within 10 min. Scintigraphic imaging was performed with a gamma camera immediately after the completion of the meal as well as after 30, 60, 120, 180, and 240 min. Quantitative and qualitative analysis was performed by drawing a region of interest (ROI) enclosing the stomach on the anterior and the posterior images. Time 0 was considered the time of meal completion (all the ingested activity) and was defined as 100% retention. The same ROI was used on all consecutive images of the same projection for the same patient. The geometric mean of the anterior and the posterior counts for each time point is calculated and corrected for Tc(99m) decay. Gastric emptying curves were constructed. T 1/2 is the time interval between completion of the meal and the point at which half of the meal (by radioactivity counts) has left the stomach. Retention is expressed as the percent remaining in the stomach at each time point (half, 1, 2, 3, 4 h). RESULTS: The mean T 1/2 raw data was 62.39+/-19.83 and 56.79+/-18.72 min (p=0.36, t=-0.92, NS) before and 3 months after LSG, respectively. The T 1/2 linear was 103.64+/-9.82 and 106.92+/-14.55, (p=0.43, t=-0.43, NS), and the linear fit slope 0.48+/-0.04 and 0.47+/-0.05 (p=0.48, t=0.7, NS). CONCLUSIONS: LSG with antrum preservation as performed in this series has no effect on gastric emptying.
Authors: John Melissas; Markos Daskalakis; Sophia Koukouraki; Ioannis Askoxylakis; Maria Metaxari; Efstathios Dimitriadis; Maria Stathaki; John A Papadakis Journal: Obes Surg Date: 2008-07-29 Impact factor: 4.129
Authors: Antje Damms-Machado; Asja Friedrich; Klaus Michael Kramer; Katrin Stingel; Tobias Meile; Markus A Küper; Alfred Königsrainer; Stephan C Bischoff Journal: Obes Surg Date: 2012-06 Impact factor: 4.129
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