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Dive into the research topics where Gaston Vantrappen is active.

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Featured researches published by Gaston Vantrappen.


Gastroenterology | 1993

Measurement of gastric emptying rate of solids by means of a carbon-labeled octanoic acid breath test

Yvo Ghoos; Bart Maes; Benny Geypens; Geert Mys; Martin Hiele; Paul Rutgeerts; Gaston Vantrappen

BACKGROUND The aim of the present study was to develop a breath test for measuring gastric emptying rate of solids that would induce less radiation exposure than radioscintigraphy and would be applicable to field testing. METHODS A test meal was used in which [14C]-octanoic acid was mixed with egg yolk and prepared as a scrambled egg. The test meal was labeled with a second marker, 99mTc-albumin colloid, and simultaneous radioscintigraphic and breath test measurements were performed in 36 subjects, 16 normal controls, and 20 patients with dyspeptic symptoms. Mathematical analysis of the excretion rate of labeled CO2 resulted in the definition of three parameters, i.e., gastric emptying coefficient, gastric half-emptying time, and lag phase. RESULTS There was an excellent correlation between the gastric emptying coefficient and the scintigraphic half-emptying time (r = -0.88); between the half-emptying time determined by the breath test and the scintigraphic half-emptying time (r = 0.89); and between the lag phases determined by scintigraphy and those determined by breath test (r = 0.92). 14C can be replaced by 13C for labeling the octanoic acid used in the breath test. CONCLUSIONS It is concluded that the octanoic acid breath test is a reliable noninvasive test to measure gastric emptying rate of solids.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 1977

The interdigestive motor complex of normal subjects and patients with bacterial overgrowth of the small intestine.

Gaston Vantrappen; Jozef Janssens; J Hellemans; Yvo Ghoos

Intraluminal pressures were measured in the gastric antrum and at different levels of the upper small intestine in 18 normal subjects to investigate whether or not the interdigestive motor complex, identified in several animal species, occurs in man and, if so, to determine its characteristics. In all normal subjects, the activity front of the interdigestive motor complex was readily identified as an uninterrupted burst of rhythmic contraction waves that progressed down the intestine and that was followed by a period of quiescence. Quantitative analysis of various parameters of the complex and simultaneous radiological and manometrical observations revealed that it resembled closely the canine interdigestive motor complex. To test the hypothesis that disorders of this motor complex may lead to bacterial overgrowth in the small intestine, similar studies were performed in 18 patients with a positive (14)CO(2) bile acid breath test and in an additional control group of 9 patients with a normal (14)CO(2) breath test. All but five patients had normal interdigestive motor complexes. The five patients in whom the motor complex was absent or greatly disordered had bacterial overgrowth as evidenced by (14)CO(2) bile acid breath tests before and after antibiotics. These studies establish the presence and define the characteristics of the normal interdigestive motor complex in man. They also suggest that bacterial overgrowth may be due to a specific motility disorder i.e., complete or almost complete absence of the interdigestive motor complex.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1990

Improvement of gastric emptying in diabetic gastroparesis by erythromycin. Preliminary studies

J Janssens; Theo L. Peeters; Gaston Vantrappen; Jan Tack; Jean-Luc Urbain; M. De Roo; Erik Muls; Roger Bouillon

Erythromycin mimics the effect of the gastrointestinal polypeptide motilin on gastrointestinal motility, probably by binding to motilin receptors and acting as a motilin agonist. Erythromycin may thus have clinical application in patients with disturbances of gastroduodenal motility, such as diabetic gastroparesis. To examine this possibility, we studied the effect of erythromycin on gastric emptying in 10 patients with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus and gastroparesis. We studied the emptying of liquids and solids simultaneously on separate days after the intravenous administration of erythromycin (200 mg) or placebo, using a double-isotope technique and a double-blind, crossover design. Erythromycin shortened the prolonged gastric-emptying times for both liquids and solids to normal. For example, 120 minutes after the ingestion of a solid meal, mean (+/- SE) retention was 63 +/- 9 percent with placebo and 4 +/- 1 percent with erythromycin, as compared with 9 +/- 3 percent in 10 healthy subjects. The corresponding values 120 minutes after the ingestion of a liquid meal were 32 +/- 4, 9 +/- 3, and 4 +/- 1 percent, respectively. Gastric emptying also improved, but to a lesser degree, in the 10 patients after four weeks of treatment with oral erythromycin (250 mg three times a day). These preliminary results suggest that erythromycin may have therapeutic value in patients with severe diabetic gastroparesis.


The Lancet | 1991

Effect of faecal stream diversion on recurrence of Crohn's disease in the neoterminal ileum

Paul Rutgeerts; Marc Peeters; Martin Hiele; Gaston Vantrappen; F Pennincx; Raymond Aerts; Raymond Kerremans; K Goboes

Aphthous lesions recur in the neoterminal ileum within the first few months after curative resection of the distal ileum in patients with Crohns disease. These lesions do not originate from microscopic disease that is already present at the time of surgery. To investigate the importance of faecal stream in the pathogenesis of recurrent Crohns lesions, we have studied 5 patients with Crohns disease who had ileal resection. After curative resection and ileocolonic anastomosis, a diverting terminal ileostomy was constructed 25-35 cm proximal to the anastomosis thereby excluding the neoterminal ileum, the anastomosis, and the colon from intestinal transit. After six months of exclusion, endoscopy of the ileocolon was undertaken and biopsy specimens were taken. Transit was then restored. Six months after reanastomosis further biopsy specimens were taken. These patients were compared with a control group of 75 patients with Crohns disease who underwent a one-step ileal resection and ileocolonic anastomosis. None of the 5 patients had endoscopic lesions in the neoterminal ileum after six months of exclusion and biopsies did not show inflammatory changes characteristic of Crohns disease. By contrast, 53 of 75 patients with one-step surgery had endoscopic recurrence in the neoterminal ileum within six months of surgery. All 5 patients had an important recurrence of disease, both endoscopically and histologically, at ileocolonoscopy six months after reanastomosis. Our findings strongly support the view that recurrence of Crohns disease in the neoterminal ileum after curative ileal resection is dependent on faecal stream.


Digestive Diseases and Sciences | 1979

Motilin and the interdigestive migrating motor complex in man.

Gaston Vantrappen; Jozef Janssens; T Peeters; Stephen R. Bloom; Nd Christofides; J Hellemans

In order to assess the possible role of the new candidate gut hormone, motilin, in cantrolling the interdigestive migrating motor complex (MMC) in man, 14 normal subjects were studied after an overnight fast by means of three pressure-recording catheters with orifices 25 cm apart in the upper small intestine. The typical aboral progressing bursts of pressure waves occurred at a mean interval of 137 minutes and were preceded by a peak motilin level 25 pmol/liter higher than the lowest level in the postactivity-front quiescent period. To study the effect of exogenous motilin, an infusion of pure porcine motilin at various dose levels was given to 16 normal volunteers shortly after the onset of the phase I quiescent period. Motilin infusion induced an activity front in 12 of the 16 subjects. The mean activity front interval was reduced to 46 min (P<0.001). This effect could be obtained tained even at the low dose level of 0.4 pmol/kg/min, which produced an increase in plasma motilin level of only 57 pmol/liter. These data suggest that a cyclic rise in plasma motilin levels is one of the factors involved in the production of the activity front of the migrating motor complex in man.


Gastroenterology | 1994

Appendectomy protects against ulcerative colitis

Paul Rutgeerts; Geert R. D'Haens; Martin Hiele; Karel Geboes; Gaston Vantrappen

BACKGROUND/AIMS Defining risk factors for ulcerative colitis (UC) is important to better understand the pathogenesis of this idiopathic disease. One factor modulating the disease is smoking. A pilot study showed the absence of appendectomy in the medical history of patients with ulcerative colitis. The aim of the present case control study was to compare the relative risk of developing UC after appendectomy with the relative risk of developing UC with an intact appendix. METHODS One hundred seventy-four (84 females and 90 males, mean age 34.9 years) consecutive UC patients examined at our inflammatory bowel disease clinic or hospital ward, were included. Fifty-six had pancolitis (32%) and 118 (68%) suffered from left-sided colitis. The control group consisted of 161 consecutive patients examined at the orthopedic clinic (86 females and 75 males, mean age 40.9 years). RESULTS Two parameters, absence of appendectomy and smoking, were closely related to the development of UC. Before the onset of UC, only 1 of the 174 patients (0.6%) had undergone an appendectomy. Of the 161 controls, 41 (25.4%) had undergone an appendectomy. The difference between the two groups was highly significant with an odds ratio of 59.1 (95% CI, 18-189; P < 0.001). The relative risk of getting the disease associated with nonsmoking was 2.95 (95% CI, 1.69-5.17). CONCLUSIONS Appendectomy is a protective factor against UC.


The Lancet | 1990

Treatment of bleeding gastrointestinal vascular malformations with oestrogen-progesterone.

E. Van Cutsem; Paul Rutgeerts; Gaston Vantrappen

10 patients with frequent and severe bleeding from gastrointestinal vascular malformations took part in a double-blind, placebo-controlled, cross-over trial of a daily dose of 0.05 mg ethinyloestradiol plus 1 mg norethisterone given by mouth. Each arm of the trial lasted 6 months. Oestrogen-progesterone significantly decreased the transfusion need from 10.9 to 1.1 units packed cells (p less than 0.003). While on oestrogen-progesterone 2 of 9 patients required transfusions (mean 1.1 units packed cells per patient over 6 months), whereas all patients had to be transfused while on placebo (mean 10.9 units per patient over 6 months; p = 0.002 for number of patients). No significant excess of side-effects was noted with the active agents. The findings indicate that oestrogen-progesterone is an effective treatment for severely bleeding gastrointestinal vascular malformations.


Gastroenterology | 1986

24-Hour recording of esophageal pressure and pH in patients with noncardiac chest pain

Jozef Janssens; Gaston Vantrappen; G Ghillebert

Sixty patients with anginalike chest pain of noncardiac origin were studied to determine the diagnostic value of 24-h ambulatory esophageal pH and pressure monitoring. The results of these 24-h studies were compared with those obtained by established methods, including x-rays, endoscopy with biopsy, conventional esophageal manometry, and acid perfusion test. Esophageal origin of the chest pain was considered to be likely if the familiar pain sensation was reproduced by the acid perfusion test, or if the pain occurred during an episode of gastroesophageal reflux, severe motor disorders, or both. When the results of established methods were combined and interpreted according to predetermined criteria, esophageal origin of the pain was shown to be likely in 27% of the patients. The 24-h recordings, alone, showed the esophagus to be the likely cause of the pain in 35% of the patients. Combination of all conventional examinations and of 24-h recordings made esophageal origin of the pain likely in 48% of the patients.


Gastroenterology | 1992

Effect of Erythromycin On Gastric-motility in Controls and in Diabetic Gastroparesis

Jan Tack; J Janssens; Gaston Vantrappen; Theo L. Peeters; Vito Annese; Inge Depoortere; Eric Muls; Roger Bouillon

The effect of three doses of erythromycin on interdigestive gastrointestinal motility and on plasma motilin levels was studied in healthy volunteers and patients with diabetic gastroparesis. Abnormalities of interdigestive motility were observed in 40% of the patients. In healthy volunteers, 40 mg erythromycin elicited a premature phase 3 that started in the stomach. In contrast to the spontaneous gastric phase 3, this erythromycin-induced phase 3 was not accompanied by a motilin peak. In patients with diabetic gastroparesis, 40 mg erythromycin induced a premature phase 3 in three patients, no response in one patient, and a burst of antral contractions in another patient. Doses of 200 and 350 mg erythromycin elicited a burst of antral phase-3-like contractions in both volunteers and patients, which was not accompanied by a motilin peak. This phase-3-like activity did not migrate to the small intestine and was not followed by a phase 1, but by a prolonged period of antral contractile activity. The number and amplitude of antral contractions after 200 or 350 mg erythromycin were significantly higher than after 40 mg. The motor patterns induced by different doses of erythromycin offer potential therapeutic applications.


Scandinavian Journal of Gastroenterology | 1979

The Secretory Component of the Interdigestive Migrating Motor Complex in Man

Gaston Vantrappen; T Peeters; Jozef Janssens

Intraduodenal pH, bicarbonate and amylase secretion, and gastric acid and pepsin output were studied in relation to the migrating motor complex in man. The occurrence of a motor complex in the duodenum was preceded by an increase in gastric acid and pepsin output and followed by a peak in bicarbonate and amylase secretion. It is concluded that the interdigestive phase in man is characterized by periodic activity complexes comprising both motor and secretory components. These observations may have important implications for the interpretation of currently used functional tests of gastrointestinal secretion.

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Karel Geboes

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Paul Rutgeerts

The Catholic University of America

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Jozef Janssens

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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J Janssens

Catholic University of Leuven

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Yvo Ghoos

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Valeer Desmet

Catholic University of Leuven

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J Hellemans

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Georges Coremans

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Martin Hiele

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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T Peeters

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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