Unraveling the Enigma of Post-sleeve Differential Liquid Tolerance: A Time-Resolved MRI Study
Athar Elward, Ahmad Omar, Ahmed Abdelsalam, Islam Shawali, Mina Makram, Ahmed Refaat

TL;DR
This study uses MRI to show that water and juice tolerance improves six months after sleeve gastrectomy, with changes in stomach motility patterns.
Contribution
The study introduces time-resolved MRI to analyze post-sleeve gastrectomy fluid tolerance and gastric motility dynamics.
Findings
Water tolerance improved significantly six months after surgery, while juice tolerance remained better.
MRI showed improved gastric motility, including increased antral contraction height and velocity.
Early wave contraction height differed significantly between water and juice tolerance.
Abstract
Laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy is one of the restrictive bariatric procedures that often impair food and fluid tolerance and negatively impact quality of life as it affects patients’ weight loss, hospital stay, and lifestyle. The objective of this study was to evaluate water and juice tolerance after LSG using dynamic magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the stomach to determine the relationship between fluid tolerance and gastric motility. The prospective cohort study enrolled 17 adult subjects of both sexes, with a body mass index (BMI) greater than 40 kg/m2 without comorbidities or 35 kg/m2 with comorbidities, who underwent LSG. Patients were monitored for water and juice tolerance, and dynamic MRI imaging for gastric motility patterns was obtained at one and six months postoperatively. More than half of participants (58.8%) reported difficulty tolerating water, while 5.9% of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBariatric Surgery and Outcomes · Gastroesophageal reflux and treatments · Cardiovascular Function and Risk Factors
