M. Barbar et al., Electrogastrography versus gastric emptying scintigraphy in children with symptoms suggestive of gastric motility disorders, J PED GASTR, 30(2), 2000, pp. 193-197
Citations number
24
Categorie Soggetti
Pediatrics,"Medical Research General Topics
Journal title
JOURNAL OF PEDIATRIC GASTROENTEROLOGY AND NUTRITION
Background: Cutaneous electrogastrography is a method of recording gastric
electrical activity. Abnormalities of the electrogastrogram have been descr
ibed in a variety of disorders. The purpose of the study was to correlate t
he electrogastrograms of children with vomiting and dyspepsia with the resu
lts of radionucleotide gastric emptying studies.
Methods: Nine patients (5-16 years old) with gastrointestinal symptoms of v
omiting and/or abdominal pain were studied. The electrogastrogram was recor
ded using surface electrodes for 30 minutes in the fasting state and for 12
0 minutes after a radioisotope-labeled solid meal. Gastric emptying was sim
ultaneously monitored for 120 minutes. The postprandial change in dominant
power (power ratio: postprandial/fasting dominant power), percentages of no
rmal slow wave, bradygastria, and tachygastria were recorded and analyzed.
Results: The patients were divided into two groups. The first group (four p
atients; five studies) had normal gastric emptying, whereas the second grou
p (five patients) had delayed emptying (half-life, >90 minutes). The median
power ratio in the first group was 1.69 and in the second group was 2.78;
the difference was not statistically significant (P = 0.90). The median dif
ference in slow wave percentages in the fasting and postprandial periods wa
s 0.99 in the first group and 0.73 in the second group; again, the differen
ce was not statistically significant (P = 0.27).
Conclusions: Although it is a method of assessing gastric myoelectrical act
ivity and gastric motility disorders, electrogastrogram does not correlate
with nuclear scintigraphic gastric emptying studies in children.