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  • motility  (2)
  • Constipation  (1)
  • DISTENSION  (1)
  • 1
    ISSN: 1530-0358
    Keywords: Colon ; Constipation ; Eating ; Myoelectric
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Pathophysiologic mechanisms responsible for severe chronic constipation are poorly understood. In particular, most of the published studies have lumped together patients having different subtypes of constipation, with different and often conflicting results. We studied six patients complaining of severe idiopathic constipation and displaying homogeneous clinical and pathophysiologic features (i.e.,patients with slow-transit type constipation) to evaluate their myoelectric spiking responses to food ingestion. Ten healthy subjects acted as controls. The constipated patients failed to show the increase in myoelectric spiking activity that was seen in controls immediately following the meals, suggesting the possibility of a neurogenic defect in this condition.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Digestive diseases and sciences 42 (1997), S. 223-241 
    ISSN: 1573-2568
    Keywords: BAROSTAT ; MUSCLE TONE ; VISCERAL SENSITIVITY ; DISTENSION ; FUNCTIONAL BOWEL DISORDERS ; STANDARDIZATION
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract An international working team of 13 investigatorsmet on two occasions to develop guidelines forstandardizing the procedures used to testgastrointestinal muscle tone and sensory thresholds usinga barostat. General recommendations were: (1) Use athin-walled plastic bag that is infinitely compliantuntil its capacity is reached. Maximum diameter of thebag should be much greater than the maximum diameter of the viscus. (2) The pump should be able toinflate the bag at up to 40 ml/sec. (3) Pressure shouldbe monitored inside the bag, not in the pump or inflationline. (4) Subjects should be positioned so that the bag is close to the uppermost surface of thebody. (5) For rectal tests, bowel cleansing should belimited to a tap water enema to minimize rectalirritation. Oral colonic lavage is recommended for studies of the proximal colon, and magnesiumcitrate enemas for the descending colon and sigmoid. (6)If sedation is required for colonic probe placement,allow at least one hour for drug washout and clearance of insufflated air. Ten to 20 min of adaptationbefore testing is adequate if no air or drugs were used.(7) The volumes reported must be corrected for thecompressibility of gas and the compliance of the pump, which is greater for bellows pumps thanfor piston pumps. (8) Subjects should be tested in thefasted state. For evaluation of muscle tone: (9) Thevolume of the bag should be monitored for at least 15 min. For evaluation of sensory thresholds:(10) It is recommended that phasic distensions be ≥60sec long and that they be separated by ≥60 sec. (11)Sensory thresholds should be reported as bag pressure rather than (or in addition to) bag volumebecause pressure is less vulnerable to measurement error.(12) Tests for sensory threshold should minimizepsychological influences on perception by making the amount of each distension unpredictable to thesubject. (13) Pain or other sensations should be reportedon a graduated scale; not “yes-no.” Theworking team recommends verbal descriptor scales,containing approximately seven steps, or visual analogscales in which subjects place a mark on a straight linemarked “none” on one end and“maximum” on the other end. (14) It isrecommended that subjects should be asked to rate the unpleasantness ofdistensions separately from their intensity.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 3
    ISSN: 1573-2568
    Keywords: cholinergic ; colon ; constipation ; edrophonium ; motility
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Chronic idiopathic constipation, especially the slow transit type, is a troubling problem often afficting young women. The pathophysiological basis for this entity is unknown, although a defective cholinergic innervation has been postulated. We tested the hypothesis that cholinergic colonic innervation is deranged in this condition by studying colonic motor activity after strong cholinergic stimulation with edrophonium chloride in 14 women complaining of slow transit constipation. Unlike healthy subjects, constipated patients showed minimal or no response to edrophonium injection. It is concluded that in slow transit constipation there is an important alteration of colonic cholinergic activity and that edrophonium chloride may represent a useful test drug for colonic pathophysiological investigations.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 4
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Digestive diseases and sciences 32 (1987), S. 953-961 
    ISSN: 1573-2568
    Keywords: scoring ; motility ; myoelectric activity ; computer ; spectral analysis ; fast Fourier transform ; pattern recognition ; colon
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract A pattern-recognition program was developed which emulates visual scoring of colonic myoelectric and pressure recordings. It smoothes digitized data with a moving average filter, computes difference scores between successive groups of three data points, and uses the signs of these difference scores to detect the beginning and end of waves. Adjacent waves are merged if their means are closer than 1.67 times the sum of their standard deviations, and amplitude and duration criteria are used to exclude nonsignificant waves. When compared to four experienced human scorers on randomly selected records, the program agreed as well with the human scorers as they agreed with each other, and it approached the level of agreement of these observers with themselves when they were asked to rescore the same records blindly four to six weeks later. Human scorers agreed with themselves on 36–71% of myoelectric slow waves and on 42–88% of pressure waves, compared to 100% test-retest reliability for the pattern-recognition program. Frequency histograms of the duration of waves detected by the pattern-recognition program differed from the spectra generated by the fast Fourier transform (FFT) method. This pattern-recognition program provides an alternative to spectral analysis for the reliable and objective quantification of colonic myoelectric slow waves and pressure waves.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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