Abstract

During a GE test (breath test with 13C-octanoic acid labelled 250 kcal solid meal), the severity of 6 symptoms (postprandial fullness, epigastric pain and burning, bloating, nausea and belching) was assessed, every 15 min, before meal-intake and 4h postprandially. The sum of individual symptom scores generated the meal-related symptoms score; the sum of all symptoms generated overall meal-related symptom severity (OSS). Data were compared in patients with normal and delayed GE (cut-off T1/2≥ 109 min). Data are shown as mean±SEM. 504 patients were included, of which 382 patients (67% female, age 43.8±0.8 years, BMI 23.3±0.2 kg/m2) had normal and 122 patients (77% female, age 42.7±1.5 years, BMI 23.2±0.6 kg/m2) had delayed GE. OSS tended to be higher in patients with delayed GE (81.8±3.4 vs. 99.5±7.1, p=.05). Only nausea was significantly higher in patients with delayed GE (11±0.8 vs. 16±1.6, p=.01). No correlations were observed between GE rate and any of the symptoms (OSS: r=0.06, p=.2; nausea: r=0.06, p=.1). The symptom severity time course showed a significant difference only for nausea, with increased severity ratings 90 min after the meal (p<.01) in delayed GE compared to normal GE patients. The severity of symptoms in functional dyspepsia and idiopathic gastroparesis, even when assessed during the GE test meal, is not correlated to gastric emptying rate. (Ethics committee University Hospital of Leuven study number S55426).

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