1. Distal contractile integral measurement and vascular compression in the esophagus: a problem unsolved?
- Author
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Kahwage RL and de Oliveira RB
- Subjects
- Adult, Artifacts, Case-Control Studies, Chagas Disease blood, Chagas Disease diagnosis, Chagas Disease epidemiology, Deglutition physiology, Esophageal Motility Disorders diagnosis, Esophagus physiology, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Muscle, Smooth physiology, Peristalsis physiology, Pressure adverse effects, Prevalence, Chagas Disease physiopathology, Esophageal Motility Disorders physiopathology, Esophagus blood supply, Manometry methods, Muscle Contraction physiology
- Abstract
Background: Distal contractile integral (DCI) is influenced by factors other than esophageal smooth muscle contractility, such as intrabolus pressure and vascular and respiratory movements' artifacts. We aimed to determine the size of the contribution of pressures generated by vascular compression on the esophagus to the DCI measured in HRM recordings in symptomatic patients., Methods: HRM manometry recordings obtained from 383 subjects referred to the GI motility laboratory at a tertiary center (2012-2016) were evaluated by visual inspection for evidence of strong vascular compression (SVC) of the esophagus. Clinical, demographic, manometric, and serologic data for Chagas disease were obtained. Subjects were classified, respectively, as asymptomatics (ASYM) or symptomatics (SYMP). DCI and SVC-DCI were measured, and the SVC-DCI/DCI ratio was expressed as a percentage and the difference between DCI and SVC-DCI (neat-DCI) was calculated. DCI, SVC-DCI, SVC-DCI/DCI % and neat-DCI from SYMP and ASYM were compared., Results: SVC was conspicuous in 42 of 383 subjects (11%). In 33 subjects, SVC was detected only in supine position. SVC was localized in middle esophagus in 21 subjects (50%), in distal esophagus in 12 subjects (29%) and in both regions in 9 subjects (21%). In 9 subjects, SVC vanished from the swallowing window analysis (21%)., Conclusions: SVC is a common finding in esophageal HRM study, particularly in the supine position. Occasionally, its contribution to DCI value is sufficiently great to masquerade esophageal hypocontractility. Different manometric protocols may be required in patients with SVC.
- Published
- 2020
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