Prolonged manometric recording of anorectal motor activity in ambulant human subjects: Evidence of periodic activity

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Abstract

Based on short recordings, the rectum has been shown to have contractions with a frequency of five to 10 cycles per minute and slow contractions at three cycles per minute. To define anorectal motility over a prolonged period of time, we have studied 12 healthy volunteers using a fine pressure sensitive anorectal probe. A total of 240 hours of recording was obtained. We observed three types of activity in the rectum: (i) runs of powerful phasic contractions with a frequency of two to three per minute, lasting for three to 10 minutes, and recurring to an interval of 92 (1.9) minutes (mean (SEM) during the day and 56 (1.7) minutes (mean (SEM)) at night, (ii) isolated prolonged contractions lasting for 10-20 seconds and seen mainly during walking, and (iii) clusters of contractions occurring at a frequency of five to six per minute lasting for one to two minutes and seen predominantly during the postprandial period. These clusters of contractions resembled the discrete clustered contractions seen in the ileum, whereas the more powerful and prolonged runs of contractions resembled phase III activity in the small intestine. In contrast, the anal canal showed bursts of contractions which were not temporally related. Our data show that the rectum, like the upper gastrointestinal tract, exhibits periodic motor activity; it remains to be seen whether these two biorhythms are synchronous.

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APA

Kumar, D., Williams, N. S., Waldron, D., & Wingate, D. L. (1989). Prolonged manometric recording of anorectal motor activity in ambulant human subjects: Evidence of periodic activity. Gut, 30(7), 1007–1011. https://doi.org/10.1136/gut.30.7.1007

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