Thursday, August 14, 2008
Advances in the management of gastroparesis
Opinion statement  The treatment goals for patients with gastroparesis are to control symptoms; to correct fluid, electrolyte, and nutritional         deficiencies; and to identify and treat the underlying cause of gastroparesis. For mild symptoms, dietary modifications and         a low-dose antiemetic and/or prokinetic agent might provide satisfactory control of symptoms. Dietary treatments include decreasing         the solid food component while increasing the liquid nutrient component of meals. Fat and fiber intake should be minimized.         Metoclopramide, despite its potential for neurological side effects, remains a prokinetic treatment for symptomatic patients.         In patients with diabetic gastroparesis, careful regulation of glycemic control may help to reduce symptoms. Medical management         of patients with gastroparesis who do not respond to initial antiemetic or prokinetic therapy or who develop medication-related         side effects involves the use of other prokinetic and antiemetic agents with different mechanisms of action. Combinations         of prokinetic and antiemetic agents often are tried in patients with persistent symptoms. In some patients with persistent         refractory symptoms and failure to maintain adequate fluid and/or nutritional intake, bypassing the stomach with jejunostomy         feedings may be necessary. Gastric electrical stimulation is a treatment for refractory gastroparesis. Based on initial studies         showing symptom benefit, especially in patients with diabetic gastroparesis, gastric electrical stimulation was granted humanitarian         US Food and Drug Administration approval for the treatment of chronic, refractory nausea and vomiting secondary to idiopathic         or diabetic gastroparesis. However, which patients are likely to respond, the optimal electrode position, and the optimal         stimulation parameters remain areas that need to be addressed.
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