This study is being done to determine if people with and without GERD or trouble swallowing have increased esophageal mucosa impedance (food getting into the esophageal tissue).
In patients with gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) but without gross evidence of esophageal injury, confirmation of acid reflux is typically performed through testing that measures reflux at or proximal to 5 cm above the gastroesophageal junction. These tests such as pH/impedance monitoring and Bravo probe placement in the esophagus have been the gold standard for diagnosing and quantitating the degree of gastroesophageal reflux. This stands in contrast to the concept that the esophagus distal to 5 cm is first and foremost exposed to gastroesophageal reflux and that most injury in the form of erosive esophagitis is seen in the 4cm segment below where this instruments measure reflux. As a result, this type of testing may not allow for full understanding of the pathophysiology of GERD. Furthermore, with refluxed acid exposure limited to the distal esophagus in some patients, use of conventional pH testing could lead to inaccurate diagnosing of GERD. Esophageal impedance testing measures epithelial integrity as reflected through the ability of the mucosa to conduct electric current. As dilation of intercellular spaces in biopsies from patients with GERD is considered the earliest indication of esophageal injury in response to reflux in the absence of gross endoscopic injury, the measure of increased current conduction through these dilated spaces has been shown to be an accurate means of diagnosing patients with non-erosive reflux disease. To this point, most esophageal impedance has been measured using impedance ports placed at locations similar to the pH probes in a combined intra-esophageal ambulatory catheter. As a result, the most distal point of impedance measurement is also 5 cm above the gastroesophageal junction. Recently, a site specific endoscopically placed impedance probe has been developed that can measure esophageal mucosal impedance at any point of the esophagus. In this study the Principal Investigator would like to look at patients with and without reflux symptoms measuring impedance at 1,2,3,4 and 5 cm at the 6 o'clock position above the Gastroesophageal Junction.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
DIAGNOSTIC
Masking
NONE
Esophageal impedance testing measures epithelial integrity as reflected through the ability of the mucosa to conduct electric current. Recently, a site specific endoscopically placed impedance probe has been developed that can measure esophageal mucosal impedance at any point of the esophagus.
Mayo Clinic in Rochester
Rochester, Minnesota, United States
Epithelial integrity in GERD an Non-GERD subjects
A special sensor array (Mucosal Impedance) composed of 360\_ circumferential sensing rings was engineered and mounted on a 2-mm-diameter soft catheter easily traversable through the working channel of an upper endoscope. The frequency for the measuring circuit was set at 2 kHz. Impedance measurements of the esophageal mucosa were expressed in ohms as the ratio of voltage to the current, according to Ohm's law (voltage ¼ IR). Data will be acquired with a stationary impedance data acquisition system and viewed and analyzed on BioView Analysis software. Impedance measurements will be obtained at 1,2,3,4, 5 cm at the 6 O'clock position above the gastroesophageal junction
Time frame: 1 year
Epithelial integrity by Mucosal Impedance verses gold standard Ambulatory pH monitoring
To compare the findings of esophageal impedance probe measurement to those of traditional pH monitoring in patients with NERD undergoing clinically indicated pH/impedance monitoring to determine the accuracy of the impedance probe relative to the gold standard catheter based evaluation.
Time frame: 1 year
This platform is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional.