Eypasch E P, Stein H J, DeMeester T R, Johansson K E, Barlow A P, Schneider G T
Department of Surgery, Creighton University School of Medicine, Omaha, Nebraska 68131.
Am J Surg. 1990 Jan;159(1):144-51; discussion 151-2. doi: 10.1016/s0002-9610(05)80620-8.
Ambulatory 24-hour esophageal manometry was applied to analyze motility in 12 normal subjects and 9 patients with chest pain and dysphagia caused by diffuse esophageal spasm (DES). Pain episodes characterized by nonperistaltic activity occurred in 7 of 9 patients. A score based on 10 variables of the motility pattern differentiated patients from normal subjects and quantitated the severity of the disorder. Ambulatory motility monitoring was prospectively performed in 8 normal subjects and 37 patients: 8 with DES, 13 with hypertensive contractions, and 16 with a nonspecific disorder on standard manometry. The score was positive in 6 of 8 patients with DES and negative in all normal subjects (accuracy 87 percent). Nine of the 13 patients with hypertensive contractions (70 percent) and 6 of 16 with nonspecific disorders (38 percent) had a pathologic score reflecting a dysmotility as severe as DES. Ambulatory esophageal manometry is a more physiologic way to identify a motor disorder than standard manometry and has the potential to improve selection of patients for a surgical myotomy.