scholarly journals Vagus nerve stimulation promotes gastric emptying by increasing pyloric opening measured with magnetic resonance imaging

2018 ◽  
Vol 30 (10) ◽  
Author(s):  
K.‐H. Lu ◽  
J. Cao ◽  
S. Oleson ◽  
M. P. Ward ◽  
R. J. Phillips ◽  
...  
2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kun-Han Lu ◽  
Jiayue Cao ◽  
Steven Oleson ◽  
Matthew P Ward ◽  
Terry L Powley ◽  
...  

AbstractBackgroundVagus nerve stimulation (VNS) is an emerging electroceutical therapy for remedying gastric disorders that are poorly managed by pharmacological treatments and/or dietary changes. Such therapy seems promising since the vagovagal neurocircuitry controlling the enteric nervous system strongly influences gastric functions.MethodsHere, the modulatory effects of left cervical VNS on gastric emptying in rats was quantified using a 1) feeding protocol in which the animal voluntarily consumed a post-fast, gadolinium-labeled meal and 2) newly developed, robust, sensitive and non-invasive imaging strategy to measure antral motility, pyloric activity and gastric emptying based on contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and computer-assisted image processing pipelines.Key ResultsVNS significantly accelerated gastric emptying (control vs. VNS: 24.9±3.5% vs. 40.7±3.9% of meal emptied per 4hrs, p<0.05). This effect resulted from a greater relaxation of the pyloric sphincter (control vs. VNS: 1.4±0.2 vs. 2.5±0.5 mm2cross-sectional area of lumen, p<0.05), without notable changes in antral contraction amplitude (control vs. VNS: 30.6±3.0% vs. 32.5±3.0% occlusion), peristaltic velocity (control vs. VNS: 0.67±0.03 vs. 0.67±0.03 mm/s), or frequency (control vs. VNS: 6.3±0.1 vs. 6.4±0.2 cpm). The degree to which VNS relaxed the pylorus positively correlated with gastric emptying rate (r = 0.5465, p<0.01).Conclusions & InferencesThe MRI protocol employed in this study is expected to enable advanced preclinical studies to understand stomach pathophysiology and its therapeutics. Results from this study suggest an electroceutical treatment approach for gastric emptying disorders using cervical VNS to control the degree of pyloric sphincter relaxation.Key PointsVagus nerve stimulation is emerging as a new electroceutical therapy for treating gastric disorders. However, its underlying mechanism(s) and therapeutic effect(s) remain incompletely understood.Vagus nerve stimulation significantly accelerated gastric emptying by promoting the relaxation of the pyloric sphincter.MRI offers high spatial and temporal resolution to non-invasively characterize gastric motility and physiology in preclinical animal models.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Fetzer ◽  
M. Dibué ◽  
A. M. Nagel ◽  
R. Trollmann

Abstract Purpose Vagus nerve stimulation (VNS) is an effective adjunctive treatment for drug-resistant epilepsy (DRE) and difficult-to-treat depression (DTD). More than 125.000 patients have been implanted with VNS Therapy® System (LivaNova PLC) since initial approval. Patients with DRE often require magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the brain during the course of their disease. VNS Therapy System devices are labeled to allow MRI under certain conditions; however, there are no published comprehensive articles about the real-world experience using MRI in patients with implanted VNS devices. Methods A systematic review in accordance with PRISMA statement was performed using PubMed database. Full-length articles reporting MRI (1.5 T or 3 T scanner) of patients with implanted VNS for DRE or DTD and published since 2000 were included. The primary endpoint was a positive outcome that was defined as a technically uneventful MRI scan performed in accordance with the VNS Therapy System manufacturer guidelines and completed according to the researchers’ planned scanning protocol without harm to the patient. Results Twenty-six articles were eligible with 25 articles referring to the VNS Therapy System, and 216 patients were included in the analysis. No serious adverse events or serious device-related adverse events were reported. MRI scan was prematurely terminated in one patient due to a panic attack. Conclusion This systematic review indicates that cranial MRI of patients with an implanted VNS Therapy System can be completed satisfactorily and is tolerable and safe using 1.5 T and 3 T MRI scanners when performed in adherence to the VNS manufacturer’s guidelines.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kun-Han Lu ◽  
Jiayue Cao ◽  
Robert Phillips ◽  
Terry L Powley ◽  
Zhongming Liu

AbstractBackgroundVagus nerve stimulation (VNS) is an emerging bioelectronic therapy for regulating food intake and controlling gastric motility. However, the functional impact of different VNS parameters on postprandial gastric motility remains incompletely characterized. Moreover, while most studies focused on stimulating the motor limb (i.e. efferent VNS) of the vagovagal circuitry, the contribution of electrically activating the reflex arc of the circuitry (i.e. afferent VNS) to downstream control of gastric function has seldom been investigated.MethodsHere, we used dynamic gastric magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to assess antropyloric motility in anesthetized rats during which VNS was applied to the left cervical vagus. The configuration of VNS was varied in terms of directionality (i.e. afferent, efferent or combined afferent and efferent VNS) as well as parameter settings (i.e. pulse amplitude, pulse width, and frequency). The motility measurements were computed using a previously developed computer-assisted image processing pipeline.Key ResultsWe found that electrical activation that favored the afferent pathway could promote gastric motility and coordination more effectively than direct activation of the efferent pathway. A reduction in antral contraction amplitude and pyloric tone under high-dose efferent VNS highlighted the inhibitory role of the efferent vagovagal circuitry.Conclusions & InferencesThis study demonstrated the direct and reflex gastric responses to cervical VNS measured with MRI. Our findings suggest that selective stimulation of vagal afferents is potentially more favorable than stimulation of vagal efferents in facilitating coordinated antropyloric motility.Key PointsVagus nerve stimulation is emerging as a new bioelectronic therapy for remedying gastric symptoms. However, the effects of graded VNS settings and directionality preferences of VNS on gastric functions remain incompletely characterized.Dynamic gastric MRI revealed that electrical activation of the afferent pathway could promote antropyloric motility more effectively than direct activation of the efferent pathway.MRI can noninvasively characterize post-prandial gastric motility with high spatial and temporal resolution that could be used to guide the selection of VNS settings.


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