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神经病学   3篇
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o.  goetze  r.  treier †  m.  fox    a.  steingoetter †  §  m.  fried    p.  boesiger †  ‡ & w.  schwizer   《Neurogastroenterology and motility》2009,21(7):725-e42
Abstract Conventional measurement of gastric secretion is invasive and cannot assess the intra‐gastric distribution of gastric contents or the effects of secretion on gastric function. This study assessed the effect of gastric secretion on gastric volume responses and emptying (GE) using a validated fast T1 mapping magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) technique. Twelve healthy participants were studied in the fasted state and after 200 kcal Gadolinium‐DOTA labelled glucose meal during intravenous infusion of pentagastrin or placebo in double‐blind, randomized order. Total gastric volume (TGV) and gastric content volume (GCV) was assessed by MRI volume scans and secretion by fast T1 mapping. Data was described by the κ‐coefficient (volume change after meal ingestion), by GE half time (T50) and maximal GE rate (GERmax) derived all from a GE model. Pentagastrin increased GCV and TGV compared to placebo [κ(GCV):1.6 ± 0.1 vs 0.6 ± 0.1; κ(TGV): 1.6 ± 0.1 vs 0.7 ± 0.1; P < 0.001]. T1 maps revealed a secretion layer above the meal, the volume of which was associated with κ (R2 = 83%, P < 0.001). TGV and GCV change were similar in both conditions (κ; P = ns). T50 was higher for pentagastrin than for placebo (84 ± 7 vs 56 ± 4min, P < 0.001); however, GERmax was similar (5.9 ± 0.6 vs 4.9 ± 0.4 mL min?1, P = ns). This study shows volume and distribution of gastric secretion can be quantified in‐vivo by non‐invasive MRI T1 mapping. Increased GCV drove TGV accommodation without evidence of a direct effect of pentagastrin or excess acid on gastric function. Secretion increases GCV thus prolongs GE as assessed by T50; however, GE rate is unchanged.  相似文献   
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m. a.  kwiatek  m. r.  fox    a.  steingoetter †  d.  menne ‡  a.  pal §  h.  fruehauf  e.  kaufman  z.  forras-kaufman  j. g.  brasseur §  o.  goetze  g. s.  hebbard ¶  p.  boesiger †    m.  thumshirn  m.  fried  & w.  schwizer 《Neurogastroenterology and motility》2009,21(9):928-e71
Abstract Gastric emptying (GE) may be driven by tonic contraction of the stomach (‘pressure pump’) or antral contraction waves (ACW) (‘peristaltic pump’). The mechanism underlying GE was studied by contrasting the effects of clonidine (α2‐adrenergic agonist) and sumatriptan (5‐HT1 agonist) on gastric function. Magnetic resonance imaging provided non‐invasive assessment of gastric volume responses, ACW and GE in nine healthy volunteers. Investigations were performed in the right decubitus position after ingestion of 500 mL of 10% glucose (200 kcal) under placebo [0.9% NaCl intravenous (IV) and subcutaneous (SC)], clonidine [0.01 mg min?1 IV, max 0.1 mg (placebo SC)] or sumatriptan [6 mg SC (placebo IV)]. Total gastric volume (TGV) and gastric content volume (GCV) were assessed every 5 min for 90 min, interspersed with dynamic scan sequences to measure ACW activity. During gastric filling, TGV increased with GCV indicating that meal volume dictates initial relaxation. Gastric contents volume continued to increase over the early postprandial period due to gastric secretion surpassing initial gastric emptying. Clonidine diminished this early increase in GCV, reduced gastric relaxation, decreased ACW frequency compared with placebo. Gastric emptying (GE) rate increased. Sumatriptan had no effect on initial GCV, but prolonged gastric relaxation and disrupted ACW activity. Gastric emptying was delayed. There was a negative correlation between gastric relaxation and GE rate (r2 = 49%, P < 0.001), whereas the association between ACW frequency and GE rate was inconsistent and weak (r2 = 15%, P = 0.05). These findings support the hypothesis that nutrient liquid emptying is primarily driven by the ‘pressure pump’ mechanism.  相似文献   
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Abstract The assessment of gastric accommodation and emptying by different methodologies provides inconsistent results. We aimed to compare magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), barostat and 13C‐acetate breath test (BT) for the assessment of gastric volume responses and emptying in healthy controls (HC) and patients with functional dyspepsia (FD). Eight HC and eight FD patients underwent: (i) continuous BT with simultaneous MRI in the upright position after ingestion of isocaloric, 300 kcal, 200 and 800 mL meals, both labelled with 100 mg of 13C‐acetate; and (ii) BT with gastric barostat after ingestion of the 200 mL meal. MRI measured total gastric volume and gastric content volume (GCV) at baseline, after filling and during emptying. Meal emptying half‐times (T½) for MRI and BT were calculated (mean ± SD). We found: (i) Initial GCV was lower in FD than in HC (762 ± 22 vs 810 ± 52 mL, P < 0.04) after the 800 mL meal but not the 200 mL meal. T½MRI was shorter for the 800 mL than the 200 mL meal (P < 0.001), but similar in HC and FD (200 mL: HC 117 ± 30 min vs FD 138 ± 42 min, ns; 800 mL: HC 71 ± 16 min vs FD 78 ± 27 min, ns). In contrast, T½BT was similar between meals and groups (200 mL: HC 111 ± 11 min vs FD 116 ± 19 min; 800 mL: HC 114 ± 14 min vs FD: 113 ± 17 min). (ii) Barostat measurements showed similar postprandial volume increases between groups. We conclude that direct measurements by MRI provide a sensitive, non‐invasive assessment of gastric accommodation and emptying after a meal. In contrast to MRI, BT did not detect faster emptying of high‐volume compared to low‐volume liquid nutrient meals in HC or FD.  相似文献   
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