Objective assessment of aerophagia during meals in normal controls and patients with post-prandial bloating and belching

Introduction Many patients attending GI physiology units for assessment of dysphagia and GORD also complain of postprandial bloating and/or belching. Excessive fasting aerophagia has been recently described in patients with severe continuous bloating and belching. Exaggerated air swallowing during m...

Ausführliche Beschreibung

Gespeichert in:
Bibliographische Detailangaben
Veröffentlicht in:Gut 2011-04, Vol.60 (Suppl 1), p.A27-A27
Hauptverfasser: Woodland, P, Gill, R S, Jafari, J, Bravi, I, Shimono, R, Fikree, A, Hayat, J, Yazaki, E, Bredenoord, A J, Sifrim, D
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:Volltext
Tags: Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
Beschreibung
Zusammenfassung:Introduction Many patients attending GI physiology units for assessment of dysphagia and GORD also complain of postprandial bloating and/or belching. Excessive fasting aerophagia has been recently described in patients with severe continuous bloating and belching. Exaggerated air swallowing during meals might be more relevant for postprandial symptoms but, thus far, objective assessment of prandial aerophagia and normal values are lacking. Oesophageal impedance can detect air swallowing. We aimed to quantify aerophagia during meals in asymptomatic subjects and patients with postprandial bloating and belching. Methods We assessed aerophagia during meals using ambulatory impedance-pH monitoring in 39 healthy, asymptomatic controls (from the US-Belgian MII-pH Normal value study, Shay et al. 2004; mean age in original study 39, range 22–62) to establish normal 95% confidence intervals. We identified 38 patients (mean age 43, range 17–74) with postprandial bloating and/or belching who attended the GI physiology unit for assessment of dysphagia or GORD as primary symptoms. Mealtime air swallows were visually identified when swallows were associated with antegrade flow and fast impedance increase (at least 3000 Ω from baseline) in the most distal recording segment. A score of air swallows/10 min mealtime was calculated for each subject. In patients with mealtime exaggerated air swallowing (above 95th percentile of normal values) we examined for evidence of concomitant fasting aerophagia. Results The 95% percentile range of mealtime aerophagia in normal subjects was 6.8 to 9.4 episodes/10 min, mean 8.1. Patients had significantly higher mealtime air swallowing rates than controls (mean 11.8 episodes/10 min, SEM 1.0, p = 0.003). There was no significant difference between predominant bloating and belching subgroups. Only 4 of 23 patients with exaggerated mealtime air swallowing had concomitant fasting aerophagia. Figure 1 OC-054 Prandial aerophagia in normal controls and patients with belching and bloating Conclusion We established normal values of mealtime air swallowing using oesophageal impedance. Patients with postprandial bloating and/or belching exhibit increased aerophagia during meals. Most of these patients do not have fasting aerophagia. Exaggerated air swallowing during meals can now be objectively detected and biofeedback techniques can be attempted to modify such behaviour as a potential therapeutic strategy for these patients with functional GI sympto
ISSN:0017-5749
1468-3288
DOI:10.1136/gut.2011.239301.54