Abstract

Gastric emptying (GE) requires precise antropyloroduodenal coordination for effective transpyloric flow, the mechanisms of which are still unclear. We aimed to correlate gastric antral function assessed by antroduodenal manometry (ADM) with GE scintigraphy (GES) for liquid feeds in children with suspected gastrointestinal dysmotility. Children who underwent both ADM and GES over a five-year period were reviewed. ADM tracings were re-analyzed to assess antral frequency, amplitude, and motility index (MI) pre-prandially and postprandially. Transpyloric propagation (TPP) was defined as antegrade propagated antral activity preceding duodenal phase III of the migrating motor complex (MMC). TPP was defined as "poor" if occurring in <50% of all presented duodenal phases III. For GES, regions of interest over the whole stomach, fundus, and antrum were drawn to calculate GE half-time (GE-T1/2 ) and retention rate (RR) in each region at 1 and 2h. Forty-seven children (median age: 7.0years) were included. Twenty-two had PIPO, 14 functional GI disorders, and 11gastroparesis. Children with poor TPP had longer GE-T1/2 (113.0 vs 66.5min, p=0.028), higher RR of the whole stomach and fundus at 1h (79.5% vs 63.5%, p=0.038; 60.0% vs 41.0%, p=0.022, respectively) and 2h (51.0% vs 10.5%, p=0.005; 36.0% vs 6.5%, p=0.004, respectively). The pre-prandial antral amplitude of contractions inversely correlated with GE-T1/2 , RR of the whole stomach, and fundus at 2h. TPP during phase III of the MMC correlated with gastric emptying of liquid and its assessment on ADM might predict abnormalities in postprandial gastric function.

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