Gastroparesis

Gastroparesis from other causes

Introduction The most common etiologies of gastroparesis are typically understood to be post-infectious, post-operative, diabetic, and idiopathic (the latter often overlapping with post-infectious gastroparesis, which can be difficult to identify confidently by clinical history). Case series often frame idiopathic gastroparesis…

Idiopathic gastroparesis

Introduction Idiopathic gastroparesis (IG) is defined as delayed gastric emptying with associated symptoms thereof without an identifiable cause. Although more than 90 possible causes of gastroparesis have been identified in the literature including case reports, the most common subsets are…

Postsurgical gastroparesis

Introduction Postsurgical gastroparesis (PSG) is a syndrome of objectively delayed gastric emptying without mechanical obstruction following a surgical intervention on the stomach or esophagus. It most commonly results from a surgical disruption of the vagal pathways innervating the stomach and…

Diabetic gastroparesis

Introduction Type 1 and type 2 diabetes are associated with a variety of symptoms at all levels of the gastrointestinal tract, a phenomenon documented by Rundles as early as 1945 . Probably the best known gastrointestinal complication of diabetes is…

Electrogastrography for suspected gastroparesis

Introduction Electrogastrography refers to the noninvasive method for recording and analyzing gastric myoelectrical activity (GMA) from electrodes placed on the upper abdominal surface . Electrogastrography methods are used to record electrogastrograms (EGGs) which measure GMA. The normal frequency of GMA…