PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Magnetic stimulation may improve the pain, nausea of diabetic gastroparesis

Magnetic stimulation may improve the pain, nausea of diabetic gastroparesis
2023-05-16
(Press-News.org) AUGUSTA, Ga. (May 16, 2023) – Magnetic stimulation of a group of nerves key to how our gut and brain communicate may help correct the conversation that goes awry in painful, debilitating diabetic gastroparesis, researchers say.

Patients come to Amol Sharma, MD, because their stomachs constantly hurt, they are always nauseous and they can’t or won’t eat or drink. Sometimes they can’t get out of the hospital because of nausea and vomiting.

“Gastroparesis is suspected in about 2% of the population, which is the about the population of Missouri, but only confirmed in .2% of the population so it’s a rare disorder,” says Sharma, gastroenterologist at the Medical College of Georgia and AU Health System specializing in neurogastroenterology and gastrointestinal motility.

It’s also not well understood, but physicians like Sharma are beginning to find that it’s a dysfunction in the two-way communication between the gut and the brain. More common problems like irritable bowel syndrome, also are thought to be a disorder of this gut/brain interaction, he notes.

Sharma’s lab has developed a painless, noninvasive magnetic stimulation therapy called ThorS-MagNT which they are using to target and reset the hyperactive firing of a small group of nerves at the midback, a sort of midpoint of communication between the stomach and the brain. He has good evidence from a small pilot study that one-hour sessions targeting this nerve group for five successive days can significantly reduce the disease’s debilitating symptoms.

Sharma recently received a three-year, $958,000 grant (RO1-DK133520) from the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases to conduct a larger trial.

For the new study, he’s looking at 45 patients and using two different treatment doses as well as a “sham” control, which looks like magnetic neuromodulation, to more objectively determine how well the treatment works as well as the optimal dose and placement of the treatment device. That includes looking directly at the impact on nerves both for evidence of change and to better understand how the therapy works.

The MCG researchers are targeting a group of spinal nerves in the midback, which line up with the bottom of the shoulder blades. The nerves make up the celiac ganglia, nerve bundles that are part of the autonomic nervous system, which controls functions we do instinctively like breathing and which get our gastrointestinal tract moving so food moves along as it should.

Sharma describes this region as a sort of midpoint of communication between the stomach and the brain, the pathway that says you are nauseous, full and that you are having pain.

“These are nerves that are easily excited and firing quite a bit and you can change that threshold by repeated magnetic stimulation so that their thresholds are reset so they don’t fire so quickly and so easily,” he says.

He thinks it’s the right target because he thinks dysfunctional nerve function in the stomach is key. The region is also accessible. Interestingly, some of the drugs that have worked best for gastroparesis have been low doses of antidepressants which block some signals from the stomach to the brain, he says. Tests have indicated that some areas that get messages from the gut have extreme responses from essentially no activity to hyperactivity.

The bottom line is that signals from the stomach to the brain are hyperactive which makes signals coming back from the brain say to slow the stomach down. Just why the brain would think that is a helpful response is unclear.

Their pilot study did not include a “sham” control group, or studies of the activity of the nerves directly. Rather they gauged treatment impact from extensive daily diaries patients filled out after dinner about nausea, how many times they vomited in the past 24 hours, how full they felt before even eating and their pain level, all cardinal symptoms of gastroparesis.

Patients consistently told Sharma that their nausea and vomiting were better, and they were ready to enjoy a meal again for the first time in a long time. “Their life is essentially back to normal,” he says.

This time they are doing baseline studies of brain activity using sophisticated functional imaging and high-resolution, direct measurement of electrical activity and follow up studies to see if and how it changes.

The focus for these studies is a small area of the brain called the insula, which is increasingly understood as an area which is in touch with all your organs and reaches out to other brain areas as well, which takes Sharma back to the brain likely sending some bad messages to the stomach in gastroparesis.  

“The disconnect there is the nerves going from the stomach to the brain for whatever reason are not relaying the right messages. They may be firing too much when maybe they shouldn’t, he says. In an ironic vicious loop, if the gut is sending a signal that you’re nauseous, feeling full real fast and vomiting — classic symptoms of diabetic gastroparesis — then the brain sends a signal back to the stomach to slow down its movement, and the small bowel and gut sometimes get the same message.

“There is a generalized dysmotility of the gut,” Sharma says, that he thinks magnetic stimulation can directly address. If their findings continue to hold, the researchers plan to move forward with a Phase 2 trial with Food and Drug Administration approval ultimately in mind.  

There is only one FDA-approved medicine for gastroparesis, called Reglan or metoclopramide, that is said to speed up the stomach and work on nausea centers in the brain. Some patients take antinausea medicines used by patients on chemotherapy for cancer, but the available approaches don’t appear to really address the fundamental communication problem.

Diabetes is a major cause for gastroparesis, but it also can follow surgery and some medications can trigger the problem. This new treatment strategy should help, regardless of the cause, Sharma says.

“Imagine yourself a patient with diabetes and you count how many calories you are eating and carbs you are eating, and you give yourself the right amount of insulin to cover these carbs to prevent them from raising your blood sugar. Then the food gets in your stomach and you end up vomiting up all the food because you are so nauseous and because your stomach doesn’t tolerate it very well,” he says. Blood sugar levels will go up and down and back, which can make you dizzy, blur your vision, leave you confused, drowsy and make you pass out or worse.

“We have patients arrive in comas because of how high their sugars are but their low sugars can be just as problematic and serious.” Blood glucose levels that are too low for too long, starving the brain of glucose, can lead to seizures, coma and very rarely death, according to the American Diabetes Association.

The visceral afferent neuropathy associated with diabetic gastroparesis is when the nerves that sense activity in the abdominal cavity, like the stomach being full from just eating a big meal, are damaged and/or weak.  Several studies have shown this occurs in diabetic gastroparesis along with overstimulation of the sympathetic nervous system with associated nausea.

These nerves communicate fullness, for example, to the spinal cord which takes the information to the brain. As food moves from the esophagus into the stomach, some of the organ’s muscles relax to let it enter and lower muscles start mixing the food with digestive juices until the particles get small enough to go into the small intestines and we can absorb the nutrients. Food travels the esophagus likely in less than a minute and four hours later about 90% of the meal you consumed should have moved on out of the stomach, Sharma says. “If it hasn’t, there is a problem,” he says, which could be a blockage or gastroparesis.

For more information about the study, call the research coordinator at 706-721-9875.

Previous work at MCG and the AU Health System led by Dr. Satish S.C. Rao, director of neurogastroenterology/motility and the Digestive Health Clinical Research Center, documented nerve dysfunction in a majority of patients with fecal incontinence and found that magnetic stimulation of nerves that regulate muscles in the anus and rectum improve function and dramatically reduce episodes of incontinence.  

The prevalence of diabetes in adults worldwide was estimated to be 4% in 1995 and to rise to 5.4% by the year 2025, taking the number affected from about 135 to 300 million in that 30-year timeframe, according to the ADA.

END

[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Magnetic stimulation may improve the pain, nausea of diabetic gastroparesis

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Genetic analysis of Indigenous Taiwanese peoples sheds light on Austronesian expansion

Genetic analysis of Indigenous Taiwanese peoples sheds light on Austronesian expansion
2023-05-16
The Austronesian language family is one of the largest in the world, comprising over 1,200 languages spoken from Madagascar to Hawaii. Dang Liu, Albert Min-Shan Ko and Mark Stoneking collected genome-wide data from 55 individuals from seven Taiwanese Austronesian groups and two Han-Taiwanese groups to study the genetic structure of Taiwan, the point of origin for all Austronesian-speaking peoples. There are over 20 different Indigenous groups in Taiwan, divided into “highland” and “lowland” peoples. Many lowland peoples have intermarried with Han people, and their languages are endangered or extinct. ...

Emissions reductions of Chinese EVs

Emissions reductions of Chinese EVs
2023-05-16
Chinese electric vehicles (EVs) drive larger emissions reductions over time, due to increased operating efficiency and a greener electricity mix, according to a study. More than 10% of Chinese car sales are now electric, but the full life cycle of EVs still creates carbon emissions. Shaojun Zhang and colleagues conducted “cradle-to-grave” life cycle assessments for EVs in 2015 and 2020, including fuel-cycle and material-cycle phases, and compiled life-cycle projections for 2030. The authors considered factors including sources of electricity, vehicle fuel economy, major automotive metals, and battery ...

Cognitive training helpful for some but not a panacea for fall prevention

2023-05-16
INDIANAPOLIS – One out of four adults, age 65 or older, falls every year in the U.S. Falls cause approximately 36,000 deaths annually in this age group, making it the leading cause of death from injury for older adults in the U.S. A new study, led by Regenstrief Institute Research Scientist Briana Sprague, PhD, examines whether cognitive training – specifically, speed of processing, memory and reasoning training -- can lower the risk of falling. Significantly, the researchers found no effects of the training on likelihood of falling for those at low risk of falling. Dr. Sprague also is a faculty member at Indiana ...

Jaw shapes of 90 shark species show: Evolution driven by habitat

Jaw shapes of 90 shark species show: Evolution driven by habitat
2023-05-16
An international research team led by Faviel A. López-Romero of the University of Vienna investigated how the jaw shape of sharks has changed over the course of evolution. Their conclusion: in the most widespread shark species, the jaws show relatively little variation in shape over millions of years; most variable jaws were found for deep-sea sharks. The results of this study were published in the journal Communications Biology. One of the most prominent traits in sharks is the shape of their lower jaws, which bear also impressive teeth. With their jaws, sharks are able to feed on a wide variety of prey, which also places them among the Ocean's top predators. ...

NCCN Global Policy Leader named Co-Chair of Global Health Council Roundtable Advancing International Coordination in Cancer Care

NCCN Global Policy Leader named Co-Chair of Global Health Council Roundtable Advancing International Coordination in Cancer Care
2023-05-16
PLYMOUTH MEETING, PA [May 16, 2023] — The National Comprehensive Cancer Network® (NCCN®) today announced the appointment of Katy Winckworth-Prejsnar, MPH, NCCN’s Senior Manager of Global Policy and Strategic Alliances, as Co-Chair of the Global Health Council (GHC)’s Non-Communicable Diseases (NCD) Roundtable. In this role, Winckworth-Prejsnar will help drive coordination between organizations worldwide that are working to improve policy and outcomes for cancer and other global health concerns. She will serve alongside Co-Chair Eliana Monteforte, Director of Special Projects, GHC. “NCDs—including ...

Sexually active women are not judged more harshly than men

2023-05-16
Maybe you too have bought into the idea that men with numerous sexual partners are actually admired, while women with the same are condemned – the so-called sexual double standard. But that turns out to be a myth, according to a new survey. “We haven’t found that women are subjected to the traditional double standards,” says Leif Edward Ottesen Kennair, a professor at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology's (NTNU) Department of Psychology. On the contrary, men are judged a little ...

Predicting how CPR will work minutes ahead

2023-05-16
Every year, between 1,200 and 1,500 patients suffer a cardiac arrest in Norwegian hospitals. Rapid and sound treatment is absolutely essential in helping these patients survive. Even if a patient suffers a cardiac arrest within the hospital's four walls, the prognosis is poor. Only one in four survives.  However, a new study suggests that easily available informaiton from the patient's own ECG could change the outcome. Treatment the same for everyone When a heart stops, doctors have to hurry, and the life-saving effort can last a long time. But doctors rarely have a good idea of what the ...

BGI Genomics advances precision medicine in Argentina, Brazil and Chile

BGI Genomics advances precision medicine in Argentina, Brazil and Chile
2023-05-16
BGI Genomics recently joined a mission business to South America in April 2023. Given that this continent ranks fourth in area and fifth in population worldwide, the economic and healthcare enhancement potential of this continent is compelling.  Every South American country faces different healthcare challenges and priorities. Still, the promise of precision medicine is clear: It offers an opportunity to shift the delivery of care from a legacy one-size-fits-all approach to applying the right treatment for the right patient at the right time. To help deliver on precision medicine's potential, BGI Genomics considers genetic ...

Endocrine Society’s new Scientific Statement identifies research gaps in pediatric, LGBTQIA care

2023-05-16
WASHINGTON—In a new Scientific Statement released today, the Endocrine Society identifies areas for future endocrine research to reduce health disparities in pediatric and sexual and gender minoritized populations. This Scientific Statement expands the Society’s 2012 statement by focusing on endocrine disease disparities in the pediatric and sexual and gender minoritized populations. These include pediatric and adult lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, intersex and asexual (LGBTQIA) people. The writing group focused on prevalent conditions such as growth disorders, puberty disorders, ...

Science-focused messaging could help reduce cannabis use during pregnancy

2023-05-16
PULLMAN, Wash. —Short science-backed messages about the health risks of using cannabis while pregnant could be an effective way to discourage the dangerous trend. In a new study published in Psychology of Addictive Behaviors, researchers at Washington State University found that conveying simple, scientific facts about how THC can harm a fetus was associated with reduced intentions to use cannabis while pregnant. This held true for messaging that was written to a group of women, aged 18-40, in either a narrative, story-based format or a non-narrative, factual-based one.  Additionally, the researchers found that short and simple communications designed to increase media literacy, ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Do certain diabetes drugs increase the risk of acute kidney injury in patients taking anti-cancer therapies?

Researchers integrate multiple protein markers to predict health outcomes in individuals with chronic kidney disease

How the novel antibody felzartamab impacts IgA nephropathy

Heart and kidney outcomes after canagliflozin treatment in older adults

Slowing ocean current could ease Arctic warming -- a little

Global, national, and regional trends in the burden of chronic kidney disease among women

Scientific discovery scratching beneath the surface of itchiness

SFSU psychologists develop tool to assess narcissism in job candidates

Invisible anatomy in the fruit fly uterus

Skeletal muscle health amid growing use of weight loss medications

The Urban Future Prize Competition awards top prizes to Faura and Helix Earth Technologies and highlights climate adaptation solutions with the inaugural Future Resilience Prize

Wayne State researcher secures two grants from the National Institute on Aging to address Alzheimer’s disease

NFL’s Bears add lifesavers to the chain of survival in Chicago

High-impact clinical trials generate promising results for improving kidney health: Part 1

Early, individualized recommendations for hospitalized patients with acute kidney injury

How mammals got their stride

Cancer risk linked to p53 in ulcerative colitis

Mass General Brigham experts develop laboratory toolkit for patients with viral hemorrhagic fevers such as Marburg virus disease

Ripples of colonialism: Decarbonization strategies perpetuate inequalities in human rights

Christine Schmidt elected to prestigious National Academy of Medicine

Move along moose, SFU study reveals the ‘most Canadian’ animals

Diabetes drug Ozempic also has positive effect in chronic kidney disease and obesity

Report summarizes findings from a decade of unprecedented gambling research

New lung cancer screening model removes barriers for central Texas' most vulnerable

Applications now open for Department of Energy Computational Science Graduate Fellowship

Astronauts return to Earth following seven-month science expedition on International Space Station

Alliance Bioversity-CIAT inaugurates the most advanced respirometry chambers in Latin America to measure methane emissions from livestock

Study finds bariatric surgery declined with rise in GLP-1 drugs to treat obesity

UMD researcher trains AI to predict diarrheal outbreaks related to climate change

Researchers discover that errors in protein location are a common cause of disease

[Press-News.org] Magnetic stimulation may improve the pain, nausea of diabetic gastroparesis