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Effect of intravenous amino acids on interdigestive antroduodenal motility and small bowel transit time
  1. H A J Gielkensa,
  2. A van den Biggelaara,
  3. J Vechta,
  4. W Onkenhoutb,
  5. C B H W Lamersa,
  6. A A M Mascleea
  1. aDepartment of Gastroenterology- Hepatology,Leiden University Medical Centre, Leiden, The Netherlands, bDepartment of Pediatrics, Leiden University Medical Centre, Leiden, The Netherlands
  1. Dr A A M Masclee, Department of Gastroenterology-Hepatology, Leiden University Medical Centre, Building 1, C4-P, PO Box 9600, 2300 RC Leiden, The Netherlands.

Abstract

Background Patients on total parenteral nutrition have an increased risk of developing gallstones because of gall bladder hypomotility. High dose amino acids may prevent biliary stasis by stimulating gall bladder emptying.

Aims To investigate whether intravenous amino acids also influence antroduodenal motility.

Methods Eight healthy volunteers received, on three separate occasions, intravenous saline (control), low dose amino acids (LDA), or high dose amino acids (HDA). Antroduodenal motility was recorded by perfusion manometry and duodenocaecal transit time (DCTT) using the lactulose breath hydrogen test.

Results DCTT was significantly prolonged during LDA and HDA treatment compared with control. The interdigestive motor pattern was maintained and migrating motor complex (MMC) cycle length was significantly reduced during HDA compared with control and LDA due to a significant reduction in phase II duration. Significantly fewer phase IIIs originated in the gastric antrum during LDA and HDA compared with control. Duodenal phase II motility index was significantly reduced during HDA, but not during LDA, compared with control.

Conclusions Separate intravenous infusion of high doses of amino acids in healthy volunteers: (1) modulates interdigestive antroduodenal motility; (2) shortens MMC cycle length due to a reduced duration of phase II with a lower contractile incidence both in the antrum and duodenum (phase I remains unchanged whereas the effect on phase III is diverse: in the antrum phase III is suppressed and in the duodenum the frequency is increased); and (3) prolongs interdigestive DCTT.

  • amino acids
  • antroduodenal motility
  • small bowel transit time
  • total parenteral nutrition
  • Abbreviations

    CCK
    cholecystokinin
    DCTT
    duodenocaecal transit time
    HDA
    high dose amino acids
    LDA
    low dose amino acids
    MMC
    migrating motor complex
    TPN
    total parenteral nutrition
    NO
    nitric oxide
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  • Abbreviations

    CCK
    cholecystokinin
    DCTT
    duodenocaecal transit time
    HDA
    high dose amino acids
    LDA
    low dose amino acids
    MMC
    migrating motor complex
    TPN
    total parenteral nutrition
    NO
    nitric oxide
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