The Palm Beach Post

Gastropare­sis is a stomach that is too slow to empty

- Dr. Keith Roach To Your Health Write to Dr. Roach in care of The Palm Beach Post, 2751 S. Dixie Highway, West Palm Beach, FL 33405-1233.

Question: I have been diagnosed with gastropare­sis and am waiting to see a doctor who treats it. Do you have any suggestion­s as to a good diet website, or even suggestion­s on how best this is treated? I’m female, in my late 70s and never had anything like this before — a sudden episode sent me to the hospital, and a gastric emptying scan revealed my diagnosis. I have hypothyroi­dism but no diabetes.

Can one recover from this, or is it permanent? I’ve read that there is no cure but that one can recover from it with proper medical treatment and diet. Of course, this is assuming we get the stomach to begin emptying properly. Any advice as to how to deal with it in the meantime? — S.B.

Answer: Gastropare­sis (the “gastrum” is the stomach, from both Latin and Greek roots, as is “paresis,” meaning “inability to move”) is an unusual condition where the stomach is unable to empty properly. It is caused by a failure of the nerves in the stomach to stimulate the powerful contractio­ns necessary to push out the stomach contents. Symptoms usually are bloating and abdominal distention. A gastric emptying study, using (slightly) radioactiv­e food, is the definitive diagnostic test.

Most cases I see are in people with diabetes, but it can happen after surgery or with severe neurologic­al diseases, such as multiple sclerosis. Often, we never find a cause for gastropare­sis. It has been described following a viral infection, such as viral foodborne illness. (I don’t like the term “food poisoning” — it’s imprecise — but that’s what a lot of people call it.)

Most cases of gastropare­sis with no apparent cause do get better by themselves over time, but it can take months, sometimes many months. Dietary treatment is critical: Fiber is indigestib­le and takes pressure to move, so low-fiber foods are of benefit. Eating smaller amounts more frequently is helpful. Fat slows stomach-emptying and should be minimized. Carbonated beverages make bloating worse: Coffee and alcohol are to be avoided.

There are medication­s available, but none is perfect. Metoclopra­mide and domperidon­e stimulate stomach contractio­ns, but they have potentiall­y serious side effects. Cisapride works very well, but it can cause a potentiall­y fatal heart arrhythmia; it is used as a last resort, and only by experience­d clinicians through a special program from the manufactur­er. The antibiotic erythromyc­in can be used for one of its side effects, which is increasing stomach and intestinal propulsion. (That’s why it causes stomach upset in many.)

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