| Literature DB >> 24840380 |
Yeong Yeh Lee1, Askin Erdogan2, Satish S C Rao2.
Abstract
Assessment of transit through the gastrointestinal tract provides useful information regarding gut physiology and patho-physiology. Although several methods are available, each has distinct advantages and limitations. Recently, an ingestible wire-less motility capsule (WMC), similar to capsule video endoscopy, has become available that offers a less-invasive, standardized, radiation-free and office-based test. The capsule has 3 sensors for measurement of pH, pressure and temperature, and collec-tively the information provided by these sensors is used to measure gastric emptying time, small bowel transit time, colonic transit time and whole gut transit time. Current approved indications for the test include the evaluation of gastric emptying in gastroparesis, colonic transit in constipation and evaluation of generalised dysmotility. Rare capsule retention and malfunc-tion are known limitations and some patients may experience difficulty with swallowing the capsule. The use of WMC has been validated for the assessment of gastrointestinal transit. The normal range for transit time includes the following: gastric empty-ing (2-5 hours), small bowel transit (2-6 hours), colonic transit (10-59 hours) and whole gut transit (10-73 hours). Besides avoiding the use of multiple endoscopic, radiologic and functional gastrointestinal tests, WMC can provide new diagnoses, leads to a change in management decision and help to direct further focused work-ups in patients with suspected disordered motility. In conclusion, WMC represents a significant advance in the assessment of segmental and whole gut transit and mo-tility, and could prove to be an indispensable diagnostic tool for gastrointestinal physicians worldwide.Entities:
Keywords: Constipation; Gastric emptying; Gastrointestinal motility; Gastrointestinal transit
Year: 2014 PMID: 24840380 PMCID: PMC4015195 DOI: 10.5056/jnm.2014.20.2.265
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurogastroenterol Motil ISSN: 2093-0879 Impact factor: 4.924
Figure 1.Equipments used for the SmartPill test. (A) The data receiver and laptop with the MotiliGI software is shown. The SmartPill capsule in the buffer is also shown. (B) The inside of a SmartPill capsule. (C) Activation of SmartPill capsule with a magnetic fixture.
Figure 2.In cases where patients have difficulty in swallowing, direct delivery of the capsule into the stomach can be aided with a delivery device used for the PillCam.
Figure 3.The gut transit profile in a patient with gastric emptying time (GET) of 2 hours, small bowel transit time (SBTT) of 3 hours and colonic transit time (CTT) of 12 hours. The tracings for temperature (blue), pH (green) and pressure (red) are shown, along with markers for body entry, gastric emptying, ileocecal entry and body exit.
Analysis and Interpretations of Gut Transit Time With Wireless Motility Capsule
| Landmarks | Identification | Transit time (hr) | Indications | Trouble-shooting | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Body entry | Temperature rises to body temperature | - | - | Large capsule difficult to swallow, in which PillCam delivery device may be useful. | [ |
| Gastric emptying | The pH drops to stomach baseline marks entry. Abrupt rise in the pH (>3 pH units) from stomach base-line marks exit. | 2–5 | Gastroparesis | Use of proton pump inhibitors may reduce pH change. Look at doubling of stomach and small bowel contractions during emptying if pH is non-confirmatory. Beware of fed response. | [ |
| Small bowel transit | The pH rise marks entry. An abrupt pH drop of at least 1 pH unit observed at least 30 min after gastric emptying marks exit from ileocecal junction. | 2–6 | Unclear but include upper and lower GI dysmotility | The pH drop not seen in 5–15% of cases due to ileocecal incompetence or altered microbiota. In such cases, calculate small and large bowel transit time together. | [ |
| Large bowel transit | The pH drop marks entry into cecum. Exit of body is mark by drop of temperature to room temperature or loss of signal. Capsule may be identified during defecation. | 10–59 | Slow transit constipation | If capsule not passed, there is a possibility of retention. Needs radiological identification in this case. pH data may be useful to locate the non-exited capsule. | [ |
GI, gastrointestinal.