1. A novel pilot study to evaluate the efficacy and safety of a wireless patch system in patients with chronic nausea and vomiting.
- Author
-
Lacy BE, Cangemi DJ, Accurso JM, Axelrod S, Axelrod L, and Navalgund A
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Pilot Projects, Male, Adult, Middle Aged, Wireless Technology, Gastric Emptying physiology, Gastroparesis physiopathology, Transdermal Patch, Chronic Disease, Nausea etiology, Vomiting physiopathology
- Abstract
Background: Gastric sensorimotor disorders (functional dyspepsia [FD] and gastroparesis [GP]) are prevalent and burdensome. Prolonged ambulatory recording using a wireless patch may provide novel information in these patients., Methods: Consecutive adult patients (age ≥ 18 years) referred for gastric emptying scintigraphy (GES) were eligible for study inclusion. Patients were excluded if they had prior foregut surgery; were taking opioids or other medications known to affect gastric emptying; had a HgbA1C > 10; or were recently hospitalized. Three wireless motility patches were applied to the skin prior to GES. Patients wore the patches for 6 days while recording meals, symptoms, and bowel movements using an iPhone app., Key Results: Twenty-three consecutive adults (87% women; mean age = 43.9 years; mean BMI = 26.7 kg/m
2 ) were enrolled. A gastric histogram revealed three levels of gastric myoelectric activity: weak, moderate, and strong. Patients with delayed gastric emptying at 4 h had weak gastric myoelectrical activity. Patients with nausea and vomiting had strong intestinal activity. Those with FD had weak gastric and intestinal myoelectric activity, and a weak meal response in the stomach, intestine, and colon compared to those with nausea alone or vomiting alone., Conclusions and Inferences: Patients with FD, and those with delayed gastric emptying, had unique gastrointestinal myoelectrical activity patterns. Reduced postprandial pan-intestinal myoelectric activity may explain the symptoms of FD in some patients. Recording gastrointestinal activity over a prolonged period in the outpatient setting has the potential to identify unique pathophysiologic patterns and meal-related activity that distinguishes patients with distinct gastric sensorimotor disease states., (© 2024 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF