» Articles » PMID: 11546976

Delayed Gastric Emptying in Ventilated Critically Ill Patients: Measurement by 13 C-octanoic Acid Breath Test

Overview
Journal Crit Care Med
Date 2001 Sep 8
PMID 11546976
Citations 25
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Objective: To measure gastric emptying in ventilated critically ill patients with a new noninvasive breath test.

Design: Single-center, open study.

Setting: Combined medical and surgical intensive care unit of a university hospital.

Subjects: Thirty unselected mechanically ventilated critically ill patients receiving gastric feeding and 22 healthy volunteers.

Interventions: None.

Patients: After 4 hrs without feeding, intragastric infusion of 100 mL of a liquid meal (Ensure) labeled with 100 microL 13C-octanoic acid. End-expiratory breath samples were collected into evacuated tubes from the respirator circuit every 5 mins for the first hour, then every 15 mins for 3 hrs. End-expiratory breath samples were also collected from volunteers studied supine after an overnight fast following an identical infusion via a nasogastric tube. Breath 13CO2 was measured with an isotope ratio mass spectrometer.

Measurements And Main Results: Performance of the breath test posed no difficulty or interference with patient care. The CO2 level was >1% in 1297/1300 breath samples, indicating satisfactory end-expiratory timing. Data are median and interquartile range. Gastric emptying was slower in patients compared with volunteers: gastric emptying coefficient 2.93 (2.17-3.39) vs. 3.58 (3.18-3.79), p <.001 and gastric half emptying time, derived from the area under the 13CO2 curve, 155 min (130-220) vs. 133 min (120-145), p <.008. Fourteen of the 30 patients had a gastric emptying coefficient <95% of all volunteers and 11 had a gastric half emptying time longer than 95% of all volunteers. The Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation (APACHE II) score (median 22, range 13-43) either at admission or on the day of the study did not correlate with gastric emptying coefficient.

Conclusion: Gastric emptying of a calorie-dense liquid meal is slow in 40% to 45% of unselected mechanically ventilated patients in a combined medical and surgical intensive care unit. The 13C-octanoic acid breath test is a novel and useful bedside technique to measure gastric emptying in these patients.

Citing Articles

Lack of gastric emptying at autopsy eleven days after heat trauma in the sauna- a forensic autopsy case report.

Kerscher S, Kern N, Chistiakova N, Verhoff D, Verhoff M Forensic Sci Med Pathol. 2024; .

PMID: 39688619 DOI: 10.1007/s12024-024-00931-3.


Factors associated with gastrointestinal dysmotility in critically ill patients.

Petrovic N, Zunic M, Pejcic A, Milosavljevic M, Jankovic S Open Med (Wars). 2023; 18(1):20230820.

PMID: 37808163 PMC: 10560032. DOI: 10.1515/med-2023-0820.


Gastrointestinal dysfunction during enteral nutrition delivery in intensive care unit (ICU) patients: Risk factors, natural history, and clinical implications. A post-hoc analysis of The Augmented versus Routine approach to Giving Energy Trial....

Murthy T, Chapple L, Lange K, Marathe C, Horowitz M, Peake S Am J Clin Nutr. 2022; 116(2):589-598.

PMID: 35472097 PMC: 9348974. DOI: 10.1093/ajcn/nqac113.


The prevalence and possible causes of enteral tube feeding intolerance in critically ill patients: A cross-sectional study.

Yahyapoor F, Dehnavi Z, Askari G, Ranjbar G, Zarifi S, Bagherniya M J Res Med Sci. 2021; 26:60.

PMID: 34729068 PMC: 8506243. DOI: 10.4103/jrms.JRMS_689_20.


The efficacy and safety of itopride in feeding intolerance of critically ill patients receiving enteral nutrition: a randomized, double-blind study.

Elmokadem E, Borolossy R, Bassiouny A, Hanna M, Darweesh E, Sabri N BMC Gastroenterol. 2021; 21(1):126.

PMID: 33740892 PMC: 7976729. DOI: 10.1186/s12876-021-01712-w.