Validation of an Acoustic Gastrointestinal Surveillance Biosensor for Postoperative Ileus

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Abstract

Background: Postoperative ileus (POI) can worsen outcomes, increase cost, and prolong hospitalization. An objective marker could help identify POI patients who should not be prematurely fed. We developed a disposable, non-invasive acoustic gastro-intestinal surveillance (AGIS) biosensor. We tested whether AGIS can distinguish healthy controls from patients recovering from abdominal surgery. Study Design: AGIS is a disposable plastic device embedded with a microphone that adheres to the abdominal wall and connects to a computer that measures acoustic event rates. We compared intestinal rates of healthy subjects using AGIS for 60 min after a standardized meal to recordings of two postoperative groups: (1) patients tolerating standardized feeding and (2) POI patients. We compared intestinal rates among groups using ANOVA and t tests. Results: There were 8 healthy controls, 7 patients tolerating feeding, and 25 with POI; mean intestinal rates were 0.14, 0.03, and 0.016 events per second, respectively (ANOVA p < 0.001). AGIS separated patients from controls with 100 % sensitivity and 97 % specificity. Among patients, rates were higher in fed versus POI subjects (p = 0.017). Conclusion: Non-invasive, abdominal acoustic monitoring distinguishes POI from non-POI subjects. Future research will test whether AGIS can identify patients at risk for development of POI and assist with postoperative feeding decisions.

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Spiegel, B. M. R., Kaneshiro, M., Russell, M. M., Lin, A., Patel, A., Tashjian, V. C., … Kaiser, W. (2014). Validation of an Acoustic Gastrointestinal Surveillance Biosensor for Postoperative Ileus. Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery, 18(10), 1795–1803. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11605-014-2597-y

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