Pathophysiological responses to meals in the Zollinger-Ellison syndrome: II. Gastric emptying and its effect on duodenal function

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Abstract

In this study, the authors investigated the relationship between gastric emptying and duodenal events in patients with the Zollinger-Ellison syndrome due to a gastrinoma. Like the inhibitory effect of a meal on gastric secretion (described in a companion paper), postprandial inhibition of gastric emptying reduces fractional gastric emptying rates to normal during the first 2 hr after a meal. Gastric discharges of content into the duodenum fluctuate considerably, and, in some patients, duodenal acid load and neutralizing duodenal secretions appear to be incoordinated. These mechanisms interact in part as a protective system that maintains reasonably normal duodenal hemeostasis in most Zollinger-Ellison patients during the early postprandial period. The author's data may explain why clinical evidence of overt-malabsorption is less prevalent and severe in these patients than would be expected from their enormously increased fasting gastric secretory outputs.

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Malagelada, J. R. (1980). Pathophysiological responses to meals in the Zollinger-Ellison syndrome: II. Gastric emptying and its effect on duodenal function. Gut, 21(2), 98–104. https://doi.org/10.1136/gut.21.2.98

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