Literature DB >> 9279528

Impaired gallbladder and gastric motility and pathological gastro-oesophageal reflux in gallstone patients.

P Portincasa1, A Di Ciaula, V Palmieri, A Velardi, G P VanBerge-Henegouwen, G Palasciano.   

Abstract

Impaired gallbladder motility is common in gallstone patients and might be associated with other gastrointestinal defects. Twenty patients with small stones in an opacified gallbladder at oral cholecystography and 20 healthy subjects homogeneous for sex, age and body size were studied by ultrasonography to assess gallbladder and gastric emptying simultaneously in response to a standard liquid meal (120 kcal, 11 g fat, 200 mL). The same subjects underwent ambulatory 24-h gastro-oesophageal pH monitoring. Dyspeptic symptoms were specifically investigated using a questionnaire. Gallstone patients had a significantly larger fasting (P < 0.05) and residual (P < 0.005) gallbladder volume with slower (P < 0.05) and less complete (ANOVA, 0.001 < P < 0.05) gastric emptying than healthy control subjects. The speed of antral emptying was significantly correlated with the speed of gallbladder emptying (n = 40, r = +0.31, P < 0.05). Pathological gastro-oesophageal reflux was present in 75% and 15% of patients and control subjects respectively (P < 0.05). Overall, 95% of gallstone patients had abnormal pH profiles resulting from pathological gastro-oesophageal reflux and/or prolonged gastric alkalinization. The speed of post-prandial antral emptying was significantly correlated with the duration of the longest gastro-oesophageal reflux episode (r = +0.30, P < 0.03) and duodeno-gastric reflux episode (r = +0.80, P < 0.02). Best predictors for gastric alkalinization were the following indices of gallbladder function: large fasting volume (P = 0.03), large ejection volume (P = 0.009) and slower emptying (P = 0.032). Gallbladder and gastric motility were similar in patients with (n = 12) and without (n = 8) dyspeptic symptoms. Pathological gastro-oesophageal reflux was found in 83% of dyspeptic patients and in 25% of patients without dyspepsia (P < 0.01). When reflux was present, it was significantly less in asymptomatic than in dyspeptic patients [time at pH < 4, median (range): 6.4% (3.2-22.6%) vs. 47.8% (2.1-87%), P < 0.05]. This study shows that a subgroup of gallstone patients with small-mainly asymptomatic-stones have impaired gallbladder and gastric motility as well as abnormal gastro-oesophageal pH-profiles. These findings point to the existence of multiple functional defects of the upper gastrointestinal tract in gallstone disease.

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Year:  1997        PMID: 9279528     DOI: 10.1046/j.1365-2362.1997.1600709.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur J Clin Invest        ISSN: 0014-2972            Impact factor:   4.686


  11 in total

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10.  The influence of gallbladder function on the symptomatology in gallstone patients, and the outcome after cholecystectomy or expectancy.

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