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Gastric electrical stimulation: an alternative surgical therapy for patients with gastroparesis.

Mason RJ, Lipham J, Eckerling G, Schwartz A, Demeester TR

Department of Surgery, Keck School of Medicine, University of Southern California, Los Angeles 90033, USA. rmason@surgery.usc.edu

HYPOTHESIS: Gastric electrical stimulation is an alternative to gastrectomy in patients with refractory gastroparesis. DESIGN: Retrospective case series with a median follow-up of 20 months. SETTINGS: A tertiary care university hospital and a university-affiliated community hospital. PATIENTS: Twenty-nine patients (22 women, 7 men; median age, 39 years; age range, 20-87 years) with debilitating gastroparesis who were referred for gastrectomy from December 10, 2001, through October 1, 2004. Twenty-four patients had type 1 diabetic gastroparesis and 5 patients had idiopathic gastroparesis. INTERVENTIONS: Placement of a gastric stimulator device laparoscopically in 24 patients and by laparotomy in 5 patients. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Morbidity and mortality of the procedure, symptom control, hospital readmissions, need for supplemental nutritional support, body mass index (calculated as weight in kilograms divided by the square of height in meters), and gastric emptying. RESULTS: Follow-up results were available in 27 patients. There was no 30-day mortality or morbidity in 4 patients. The median hospital stay was 3 days. All of the patients tolerated an oral diet at discharge. Symptom control was excellent to good in 19 patients. Nutritional support was discontinued in the 19 patients who were dependent on supplemental feeding before the procedure (P<.001). The median body mass index improved significantly (22.9 preoperatively vs 25.1 postoperatively; P = .006). The median gastric emptying rate (percentage per minute) was measured in 15 of the 27 patients postoperatively and showed significant improvement (0.17% per minute preoperatively vs 0.38% per minute postoperatively; P<.001). Additional procedures were required in 4 patients (owing to poor outcome in 3 patients). CONCLUSIONS: Gastric electrical stimulation ameliorated symptoms, returned patients to normal oral nutritional intake, increased body mass index, improved gastric emptying rates, and is an alternative to gastrectomy in patients with end-stage gastric disease.

Published 20 September 2005 in Arch Surg, 140(9): 841-6; discussion 847-8.
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