1. Slow-transit constipation with concurrent upper gastrointestinal dysmotility and its response to transcutaneous electrical stimulation
- Author
-
Jonathan Sutcliffe, Melanie C.C. Clarke, Coral F. Tudball, Timothy M. Cain, D J Cook, John M. Hutson, Yee Ian Yik, Bridget R. Southwell, Anthony G. Catto-Smith, Janet Chase, Susan Gibb, and Val J. Robertson
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Constipation ,Adolescent ,Colon ,Stimulation ,Pilot Projects ,Gastroenterology ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Upper gastrointestinal ,Humans ,Radionuclide imaging ,Slow transit constipation ,Child ,Gastrointestinal Transit ,Radionuclide Imaging ,Gastric emptying ,business.industry ,digestive, oral, and skin physiology ,Follow up studies ,Transcutaneous Electrical Stimulation ,General Medicine ,Treatment Outcome ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Transcutaneous Electric Nerve Stimulation ,Surgery ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Transcutaneous electrical stimulation (TES) speeds up colonic transit in children with slow-transit constipation (STC). This study examined if concurrent upper gastrointestinal dysmotility (UGD) affected response to TES. Radio-nuclear transit studies (NTS) were performed before and after TES treatment of STC as part of a larger randomised controlled trial. UGD was defined as delayed gastric emptying and/or slow small bowel transit. Improvement was defined as increase of ≥1 Geometric Centre (median radiotracer position at each time [small bowel = 1, toilet = 6]). Forty-six subjects completed the trial, 34 had NTS after stimulation (21 M, 8–17 years, mean 11.3 years; symptoms >9 years). Active stimulation increased transit in >50% versus only 25% with sham (p = 0.04). Seventeen children also had UGD. In children with STC and either normal upper GI motility (NUGM) and UGD, NTS improved slightly after 1 month (57 vs. 60%; p = 0.9) and more after 2 months (88 vs. 40%; p = 0.07). However, mean transit rate significantly increased with NUGM, but not UGD (5.0 ± 0.2: 3.6 ± 0.6, p
- Published
- 2010