| Literature DB >> 35186557 |
Stella-Maris Chinma Egboh1, Sarah Abere2.
Abstract
Gastroparesis is a neuromuscular disorder whose hallmark is delayed gastric emptying. It is a global challenge to the healthcare system because of poor treatment satisfaction for both the patients and clinicians, eventually leading to a reduction in the quality of life, with antecedent anxiety and depression. Although it is multifactorial in origin, diabetic, idiopathic, and drug-induced gastroparesis are the major risk factors. Disrupted interstitial cells of Cajal (ICC) and gastric dysrhythmia are pivotal to the pathogenesis, with most of the investigations targeted toward assessing gastric emptying and accommodation usually affected by distorted ICC and other neural networks. The treatment challenges can be overcome by a multidisciplinary approach involving gastroenterologists, gastrointestinal surgeons, biomedical engineers, nutritionists, psychologists, nurses, radionuclide radiologists, pharmacists, and family physicians. The exploration of the fundamental physiological processes underlying gastroparesis with the use of biomechanical materials should be given more attention by biomedical engineers to integrate innovative engineering with medicine for solving complex medical issues.Entities:
Keywords: gastric emptying; gastroparesis; interstitial cells of cajal; management; multidisciplinary
Year: 2022 PMID: 35186557 PMCID: PMC8846567 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.21295
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
Figure 1Risk factors for gastroparesis.
Diagnostic modalities for gastroparesis.
FDA: Food and Drug Administration
| Investigations | Advantages | Disadvantages |
| Ultrasonography | Cheap, readily available, and no exposure to radiation | Dependence on operator experience and quality of the imaging. Measurement of gastric emptying of solids is challenging [ |
| Gastric balloon barostat | The gold standard for the assessment of gastric accommodation [ | It is invasive, uncomfortable to patients, and not widely available [ |
| Single-photon emission computed tomography scan | Non-invasive estimate of gastric accommodation [ | Unlike the gastric ballon barostat, it cannot measure gastric pressure [ |
| Gastric emptying scintigraphy | It directly visualizes the test meal, thereby providing information regarding regional gastric activity | It is costly, not widely available, and exposes patients to radiation [ |
| Stable isotope breath test | Approved by the FDA as a non-invasive substitute for scintigraphy [ | The use of low‐calorie, low‐fat test meals underestimates the prevalence of gastric emptying abnormalities in real life. Poor reliability in patients with intestinal malabsorption or liver insufficiency [ |
| Esophagogastroduodenoscopy | It is useful in excluding organic diseases and can detect the presence of food in the stomach, suggesting ineffective antral motility [ | It can be associated with some major complications such as cardiopulmonary complications, infections, perforation, and bleeding [ |
| Electrogastrography | It evaluates slow-wave activity and peak potentials of the gastric contractions by measuring gastric myoelectrical activity [ | Its reliability is limited by the lack of spatial resolution [ |
| High-resolution electrical mapping | It permits the recording and reconstruction of patterns of electrical activation in spatiotemporal detail [ | The high cost of multichannel acquisition systems, difficulty in electrode construction, and the high complexity and time-intensiveness of analytical tasks [ |
Figure 2Multidisciplinary approach to gastroparesis management.
Novel pharmacological drugs for gastroparesis.
| Drugs | Mechanism of action |
| Relamorelin, anamorelin, ibutamoren, ipamorelin |
Ghrelin receptor agonist that has been shown to accelerate gastric emptying [ |
| Prucalopride |
Selective 5HT4 receptor agonist used in the treatment of constipation. It has been effectively used to enhance the gastric emptying rate in patients with gastroparesis [ |
| Aprepitant |
Neurokinin-1 receptor antagonist which inhibits the effects of the excitatory neurotransmitter substance P [ |
| Levosulpiride |
The levorotatory enantiomer of sulpiride whose pro-kinetic effect is mediated through the blockade of enteric inhibitory dopaminergic type 2 (D2) and serotoninergic 5HT4 receptor agonist effect [ |
| Mirtazapine |
A tetracyclic antidepressant with 5-HT1a receptor agonist activity in the central and peripheral nervous system [ |