Antroduodenal manometry

@article{Quigley2005AntroduodenalM,
  title={Antroduodenal manometry},
  author={Eamonn Martin Quigley and Jeremiah P. Donovan and Michael J. Lane and Thomas F. Gallagher},
  journal={Digestive Diseases and Sciences},
  year={2005},
  volume={37},
  pages={20-28},
  url={https://api.semanticscholar.org/CorpusID:29751595}
}
It is concluded that short duration antroduodenal manometry is of limited diagnostic usefulness due to the difficulties in pyloric intubation in the presence of a dilated stomach and the intrinsic variability in normal motor patterns in tube-naive subjects.

Study of human gastroduodenojejunal motility

It is almost a decade since gastroduodenojejunal manometry was moved from the physiology research laboratory and applied as an investigation in patients with unexplained upper gastrointestinal symptoms seen in tertiary referral centers, and it appears timely to ask the questions: What disease or pathophysiologic processes can be identified.

Technique of Functional and Motility Test: How to Perform Antroduodenal Manometry

The aim of this review is to describe the antroduodenal manometry technique, interpretation and clinical utility among patients who have clinically suspected small intestinal pseudo-obstruction but with normal manometric findings, the alternative diagnosis including psychiatric disorder or other organic disease should be considered.

Clinical value of duodenojejunal manometry

Dudenojejunal manometry was abnormal in patients referred for evaluation of suspected motility disorders, and directly affected therapy in approximately ⅕ patients, particularly in those with constipation.

Effect of erythromycin on antroduodenal motility in children with chronic functional gastrointestinal symptoms

In children with chronic functional gastrointestinal disorders, erythromycin rarely induced phase III in patients who did not have it during fasting, and when different doses eryhromycin are compared, the lower dose is associated with fewer side effects and the higher dose produces a higher antral motility index.

An evaluation of an ambulatory manometry system in assessment of antroduodenal motor activity

It is concluded that while an ambulatory antroduodenal manometry system is well tolerated and reliably records duodenAL motility, postprandial catheter migration limits antral recordings, and, secondly, that a motility index calculated during the first 30 min following anad libitum meal accurately reflects the fed motor response.

Interobserver variability in antroduodenal manometry

Data overall indicate that agreement between expert observers for the distinction of normal and abnormal antroduodenal motility compares favourably with other standard medical assessments.

Ambulatory small intestinal motility in 'diarrhoea' predominant irritable bowel syndrome.

Fasting ambulatory motility from electronic strain gauge sensors sited in the jejunum and ileum of eight diarrhoea predominant irritable bowel syndrome patients and 12 healthy controls has failed to show any abnormalities of fasting small intestinal motility that might distinguish diarrhoean patients from healthy controls.

Ambulatory Intestinal Manometry (A Consensus Report on Its Clinical Role)

A group of individuals with experience in this area came toge ther at the International Motility Meeting in Rome, Italy, in November 1995 and attempted to outline a consensus document on the performance and utility of ambulatory antroduode nal and small inte stinal manome try in clinical practice.

Reversal of megaduodenum and duodenal dysmotility associated with improvement in nutritional status in primary anorexia nervosa

Observations suggest that anorexia-associated gastrointestinal motor dysfunctions are a consequence, not the cause of the generalized protein-calorie malnutrition associated withAnorexia nervosa, and argue against a generalized myogenic dysfunction.

Ambulatory Small Intestinal Manometry (Detailed Comparison of Duodenal and Jejunal Motor Activity in Healthy Man)

Comparison of duodenal and jejunal motor activity in healthy individuals by utilizing prolongedambulatory manometry in combination with computer-aided analysis revealed differences in the number and organization of propagated clustered contractions, and subtle changes in the amplitude, duration, and coordinated propagation of individual contractions.
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Postprandial antral hypomotility in patients with idiopathic nausea and vomiting.

Postprandial antral hypomotility was identified as a major abnormality in patients with unexplained nausea and vomiting and could involve disorders of gut motility.

Abnormal intestinal motility in diabetics with the gastroparesis syndrome

While the majority of patients exhibited the expected reduction in antral pressure activity and gastric phase III, a small subgroup of three patients exhibited a peculiar continuous 3 min‐1 antral contractile activity.

Chronic idiopathic intestinal pseudo-obstruction: clinical and intestinal manometric findings.

Qualitative analysis of intestinal manometry provides evidence of gut dysmotility in patients with the clinical syndrome of chronic intestinal pseudo-obstruction and these abnormalities of motility can help to establish the correct diagnosis.

The interdigestive motor complex of normal subjects and patients with bacterial overgrowth of the small intestine.

These studies establish the presence and define the characteristics of the normal interdigestive motor complex in man and suggest that bacterial overgrowth may be due to a specific motility disorder i.e., complete or almost complete absence of the interdigested motor complex.

Jejunal motility in patients with functional abdominal pain.

A radiotelemetric system using dual pressure pills was used to record the jejunal motility in man, and the occurrence of characteristic pain in the patients bore no relation to the recorded motor activity.