The use of scintigraphy to study gastric emptying, motility and small intestinal transit in patients who have ingested a selection of common poisons

Poisoning is common and carries considerable morbidity and mortality. Two to three patients are admitted to the Emergency Unit at Groote Schuur Hospital every day with drug overdose. As absorption occurs in the small intestine the rates at which ingested poisons pass into and through the small bowel...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Adams, Bruce Keith
Other Authors: Mann, Michael D
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: University of Cape Town 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11427/27036
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uct-oai-localhost-11427-270362020-07-22T05:07:28Z The use of scintigraphy to study gastric emptying, motility and small intestinal transit in patients who have ingested a selection of common poisons Adams, Bruce Keith Mann, Michael D Gastric emptying Poisoning - radionuclide imaging Radionuclide imaging - Methods Poisoning is common and carries considerable morbidity and mortality. Two to three patients are admitted to the Emergency Unit at Groote Schuur Hospital every day with drug overdose. As absorption occurs in the small intestine the rates at which ingested poisons pass into and through the small bowel are important factors in determining the amount of poison potentially available for absorption. Although the effects of pharmacological doses of many drugs on gastric emptying and motility are known, information on the effects of higher doses is limited. I investigated patients who took overdoses of certain commonly used drugs to determine their effects on gastric emptying and motility and small intestinal transit. The study was divided into two parts. One hundred and four patients were studied in Part 1. These patients took overdoses of tricyclic antidepressants (n = 31), carbamazepine (n = 15), phenytoin (n = 12), paracetamol (n = 29) and opioid-paracetamol mixtures (n = 17). They received standard hospital management of which sorbitol was not a part. Part 2 consisted of sixty-one patients who had sorbitol added to their treatment. These patients had taken overdoses of the tricyclic antidepressants (n = 15), carbamazepine (n = 7), phenytoin (n = 8), paracetamol (n = 13) and opioid-paracetamol mixtures (n = 18). The effects of sorbitol on gastric emptying and small intestinal transit were evaluated. A third study-the paracetamol control test was done on 5 healthy volunteers. Each subject was studied twice; the first time after taking 1 G of paracetamol and the second time after no drug ingestion. 2018-01-29T06:47:58Z 2018-01-29T06:47:58Z 1995 Doctoral Thesis Doctoral MD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/27036 eng application/pdf University of Cape Town Faculty of Health Sciences Division of Nuclear Medicine
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Gastric emptying
Poisoning - radionuclide imaging
Radionuclide imaging - Methods
spellingShingle Gastric emptying
Poisoning - radionuclide imaging
Radionuclide imaging - Methods
Adams, Bruce Keith
The use of scintigraphy to study gastric emptying, motility and small intestinal transit in patients who have ingested a selection of common poisons
description Poisoning is common and carries considerable morbidity and mortality. Two to three patients are admitted to the Emergency Unit at Groote Schuur Hospital every day with drug overdose. As absorption occurs in the small intestine the rates at which ingested poisons pass into and through the small bowel are important factors in determining the amount of poison potentially available for absorption. Although the effects of pharmacological doses of many drugs on gastric emptying and motility are known, information on the effects of higher doses is limited. I investigated patients who took overdoses of certain commonly used drugs to determine their effects on gastric emptying and motility and small intestinal transit. The study was divided into two parts. One hundred and four patients were studied in Part 1. These patients took overdoses of tricyclic antidepressants (n = 31), carbamazepine (n = 15), phenytoin (n = 12), paracetamol (n = 29) and opioid-paracetamol mixtures (n = 17). They received standard hospital management of which sorbitol was not a part. Part 2 consisted of sixty-one patients who had sorbitol added to their treatment. These patients had taken overdoses of the tricyclic antidepressants (n = 15), carbamazepine (n = 7), phenytoin (n = 8), paracetamol (n = 13) and opioid-paracetamol mixtures (n = 18). The effects of sorbitol on gastric emptying and small intestinal transit were evaluated. A third study-the paracetamol control test was done on 5 healthy volunteers. Each subject was studied twice; the first time after taking 1 G of paracetamol and the second time after no drug ingestion.
author2 Mann, Michael D
author_facet Mann, Michael D
Adams, Bruce Keith
author Adams, Bruce Keith
author_sort Adams, Bruce Keith
title The use of scintigraphy to study gastric emptying, motility and small intestinal transit in patients who have ingested a selection of common poisons
title_short The use of scintigraphy to study gastric emptying, motility and small intestinal transit in patients who have ingested a selection of common poisons
title_full The use of scintigraphy to study gastric emptying, motility and small intestinal transit in patients who have ingested a selection of common poisons
title_fullStr The use of scintigraphy to study gastric emptying, motility and small intestinal transit in patients who have ingested a selection of common poisons
title_full_unstemmed The use of scintigraphy to study gastric emptying, motility and small intestinal transit in patients who have ingested a selection of common poisons
title_sort use of scintigraphy to study gastric emptying, motility and small intestinal transit in patients who have ingested a selection of common poisons
publisher University of Cape Town
publishDate 2018
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/27036
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