# Relationship Between Intragastric Meal Distribution, Gastric Emptying, and Gastric Neuromuscular Dysfunction in Chronic Gastroduodenal Disorders

**Authors:** Chris Varghese, Armen A. Gharibans, Daphne Foong, Gabriel Schamberg, Stefan Calder, Vincent Ho, Reena Anand, Christopher N. Andrews, Alan H. Maurer, Thomas Abell, Henry P. Parkman, Greg O'Grady

PMC · DOI: 10.1111/nmo.70170 · 2025-09-22

## TL;DR

This study shows that how food is distributed in the stomach relates to delayed emptying and worse symptoms in patients with chronic digestive issues.

## Contribution

The study introduces a multimodal approach combining gastric emptying and neuromuscular mapping to better understand chronic gastroduodenal disorders.

## Key findings

- Proximal food retention correlates with delayed gastric emptying and abnormal neuromuscular rhythms.
- Patients with multiple motor abnormalities experience more severe dyspeptic symptoms.
- Abnormal intragastric meal distribution was found in 7.5% of patients and linked to delayed motility responses.

## Abstract

Chronic gastroduodenal symptoms arise from heterogeneous gastric motor dysfunctions. This study applied multimodal physiological testing using gastric emptying scintigraphy (GES) with intragastric meal distribution (IMD) and Gastric Alimetry body surface gastric mapping (BSGM) to define motility and symptom associations.

Patients with chronic gastroduodenal symptoms underwent simultaneous supine GES and BSGM with a 30 m baseline, 99mTC‐labeled egg meal, and 4 h postprandial recording. IMD (ratio of counts in the proximal half of the stomach to the total gastric counts) was calculated immediately after the meal (IMD0), with < 0.568 defining abnormal IMD. BSGM phenotyping followed a consensus approach, based on normative spectral reference intervals.

Among 67 patients (84% female, median age 40 years, median BMI 24 kg/m2), median IMD0 was 0.76 (IQR: 0.69–0.86) with 5 (7.5%) meeting abnormal IMD criteria. Delayed gastric emptying (n = 18) was associated with higher IMD0 (median 0.9 vs. 0.7, p = 0.004). On BSGM, 15 patients had abnormal spectrograms (5 [7.5%] high frequency and 10 [14.9%] low rhythm stability and/or amplitude); and in these patients, higher IMD0 (proximal retention) strongly correlated to delayed BSGM meal responses (R = −0.71, p = 0.003). Lower IMD, indicating antral distribution, correlated with higher gastric frequencies (R = −0.27, p = 0.03). BSGM abnormalities paired with abnormal IMD were associated with worse dyspeptic symptoms.

Proximal retention of food as assessed by IMD correlated with delayed emptying, and in the presence of neuromuscular spectral abnormalities (abnormal frequencies or rhythms), delayed motility responses on BSGM. Patients with multiple motor abnormalities experience worse dyspeptic symptoms.

Multimodal physiological testing using gastric emptying scintigraphy with intragastric meal distribution and body surface gastric mapping showed proximal retention of food correlated with delayed emptying and neuromuscular spectral abnormalities (abnormal slow wave frequencies or rhythms) and delayed motility responses on BSGM. Patients with multiple motor abnormalities experience worse dyspeptic symptoms.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** neuromuscular spectral abnormalities (MESH:D009468), Gastric Neuromuscular Dysfunction (MESH:D020511), dyspeptic symptoms (MESH:D012816), motor abnormalities (MESH:D000014), BSGM abnormalities (MESH:D013272), Chronic Gastroduodenal Disorders (MESH:D010437)
- **Chemicals:** 99mTC (MESH:D013667)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

4 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12814998/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12814998