Insights into the pathophysiology of functional dyspepsia, with recent demonstration of inflammation with eosinophilia and mastocytosis in the duodenum (3, 6, 7), providing a possible lead toward reduced secretion of a potential mediator of post-prandial gastric accommodation, the gastrointestinal peptide hormone secretin. The dominant site of synthesis and secretion of this hormone are enteroendocrine S cells in the duodenum. Inflammation-induced damage to these cells could produce a deficiency. Since intraluminal acid is a prominent stimulant of S cell secretion, the attempts to treat functional dyspepsia with anti-secretory medications could actually exacerbate a secretin deficiency syndrome. This raises the possibility of the therapeutic use of a secretin agonist or a positive allosteric modulator of the secretin receptor for patients with functional dyspepsia.
The investigators will utilize single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) methodology and gamma scintigraphy present in the GI laboratory of the outpatient Clinical Research Unit to study fasting gastric volumes and postprandial gastric accommodation responses and gastric emptying rates of a standardized meal in patients with functional dyspepsia and healthy subjects. Both groups will be studied twice, using crossover design, once with administration of secretin and once with placebo.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
DOUBLE
Enrollment
20
Injected once over one minute
Injected once over one minute
Mayo Clinic in Rochester
Rochester, Minnesota, United States
Maximum Satiation
Thirty (30) minutes after ingesting the meal of 300 mL radio-labeled Ensure drink, an additional Ensure drink was ingested at a constant rate of 30 mL/min until maximum tolerated volume was reached.
Time frame: 60 minutes
Fasting Gastric Volume
Gastric fasting volume was measured prior to a meal of 300 mL standardized radio-labeled Ensure drink using an intravenous injection of Technetium Tc-99m pertechnetate and noninvasive single photon emission-computed tomography (SPECT).
Time frame: Baseline
Postprandial Volume
Postprandial volume was measured 15 minutes after ingestion of 300 mL standardized radio-labeled Ensure drink using an intravenous injection of Technetium Tc-99m pertechnetate and noninvasive single photon emission-computed tomography (SPECT).
Time frame: 15 minutes
Change in Gastric Accommodation
The change in gastric accommodation was measured in mL using the difference between the fasting gastric volume and the postprandial volume.
Time frame: Baseline, 30 minutes
Gastric Emptying
Gastric emptying was measured via scintigraphy 30 minutes after ingestion of 300 mL of radio-labeled Ensure drink and was reported as the percentage of the radio-labeled liquid meal emptied from the stomach.
Time frame: 30 minutes
Change in Postprandial Symptoms
30 minutes after ingesting a meal of 300 mL of Ensure drink postprandial symptoms of fullness, nausea, bloating and pain were measured using a horizontal visual analog scales from 0 to 100, where 0 was 'none' and 100 was 'worst ever'.
Time frame: Baseline, 30 minutes
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