J. M. D. Nightingale
Imperial College London
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Featured researches published by J. M. D. Nightingale.
Gut | 1992
J. M. D. Nightingale; J E Lennard-Jones; D. J. Gertner; S. R. Wood; C. I. Bartram
Forty six patients with less than 200 cm of normal jejunum and no functioning colon were compared with 38 patients with similar jejunal lengths in continuity with a functioning colon. Women predominated (67%), and the most common diagnosis in each group was Crohns disease (33 of 46 no colon, 16 of 38 with colon). All patients without a colon and less than 85 cm of jejunum and all those with a colon and less than 45 cm jejunum needed long term parenteral nutrition. Six months after the last resection 12 of 17 patients with less than 100 cm jejunum and no colon needed intravenous supplements compared with 7 of 21 with a colon. Between 6 months and 2 years, little change occurred in the nutritional/fluid requirements in either group, though there was weight gain. Of 71 patients assessed clinically at a median of 5 years, none with more than 50 cm of jejunum and a colon needed parenteral supplements. Most (25 of 27) of those without a colon who did not need parenteral supplements required oral electrolyte replacement compared with few (4 of 27) with a colon. None of the patients without a colon developed symptomatic renal stones compared with 9 of 38 (24%) with a colon (p < 0.001). Stone analysis in three patients showed calcium oxalate. Gall stone prevalence was high but equal in the two groups--43% of those without and 44% of those with a colon.
Gut | 1996
J. M. D. Nightingale; Michael A. Kamm; J. R. M. van der Sijp; M.A. Ghatei; Stephen R. Bloom; J E Lennard-Jones
BACKGROUND: Short bowel patients with a jejunostomy have large volume stomal outputs, which may in part be due to rapid gastric emptying of liquid. Short bowel patients with a preserved colon do not have such a high stool output and gastric emptying of liquid is normal. AIMS: To determine if differences in the gastric emptying rate between short bowel patients with and without a colon can be related to gastrointestinal hormone changes after a meal. SUBJECTS: Seven short bowel patients with no remaining colon (jejunal length 30-160 cm) and six with jejunum in continuity with a colon (jejunal length 25-75 cm), and 12 normal subjects. METHODS: The subjects all consumed a 640 kcal meal; blood samples were taken for 180 minutes for measurement of gastrointestinal hormones. RESULTS: Patients with a colon had high fasting peptide YY values (median 71 pmol/l with a colon; 11 pmol/l normal subjects, p < 0.005) with a normal postprandial rise, but those without a colon had a low fasting (median 7 pmol/l, p = 0.076) and a reduced postprandial peptide YY response (p < 0.050). Motilin values were high in some patients without a colon. In both patient groups fasting and postprandial gastrin and cholecystokinin values were high while neurotensin values were low. There were no differences between patient groups and normal subjects in enteroglucagon, pancreatic polypeptide, or somatostatin values. CONCLUSIONS: Low peptide YY values in short bowel patients without a colon may cause rapid gastric emptying of liquid. High values of peptide YY in short bowel patients with a retained colon may slow gastric emptying of liquid and contribute to the colonic brake.
Gut | 1993
J. R. M. van der Sijp; Michael A. Kamm; J. M. D. Nightingale; K. E. Britton; Stephen J. Mather; G. P. Morris; Louis M. A. Akkermans; J E Lennard-Jones
Radio-opaque markers have a well established role in distinguishing between patients with normal and those with slow intestinal transit, but in the latter group their accuracy in defining the region of delay has not been established. To study regional colonic transit accurately the transit of a radioisotope labelled meal was determined and findings were compared with those of simultaneously ingested radio-opaque markers. Twelve healthy controls (mean age 33 years) and 12 severely constipated women (mean age 36 years, bowel frequency < once per week) were studied On day 1, a meal containing 10 MBq 111In bound to 0.7 mm resin microspheres was ingested. Subjects also ingested a set of radiologically distinguishable markers on three successive days. Abdominal scans were obtained three times daily for 7 days. Abdominal radiographs were obtained after 72 or 96 hours and again at 144 or 168 hours. Eight regions of interest were created--one for the small bowel, six for the colon, and one for excreted stool. The constipated patients all showed colonic transit outside the normal range, with a variable site of delay demonstrated by time activity curves for each region. To provide a different measure of the effectiveness of colonic transport, the movement of the centre of mass for the radioisotope and for the markers was then determined. The radioisotope and radiopaque marker methods gave similar results. At all times between 24 and 144 hours there was no significant difference for the position of the centre of mass between the radio-opaque and marker methods. At all times, however, the mean difference between the markers and the radioisotopes was positive, indicating that the center of mass of the markers was always head of that of the radioisotope. The mean difference between the methods was never greater than one region of interest, and ranged from 12 to 72% of one region of interest in the colon. The difference between these two methods could reach up to two colonic segments in certain patients at one time. Radioisotope ingestion provides accurate information about the transit through individual colonic regions because of the possibility of frequent observations and the clear delineation of the entire colon. Although these features were not obtained with radio-opaque markers, they are suitable as a screening test for the presence and pattern of colonic delay.
Digestive Diseases and Sciences | 1993
Joost R.M. van der Sijp; Michael A. Kamm; J. M. D. Nightingale; K. E. Britton; Marie Granowska; Stephen J. Mather; Louis M. A. Akkermans; J E Lennard-Jones
Many patients with severe idiopathic constipation complain of upper gastrointestinal symptoms, and these often persist after subtotal colectomy. To determine if there is a disturbance of upper gastrointestinal motility in this condition, we have studied gastric emptying for solids (111In-containing pancake) and liquids (99mTc-containing orange, juice) for a longer period after a meal (6 hr) than in previously reported gastric emptying studies. Small bowel transit for solids was also measured. All patients had emptied their colon the day before the study. Twelve women (mean age 36 years) with a bowel frequency of less than once per week, proven slow intestinal transit, and a normal diameter colon were studied. Twelve healthy controls (eight female and four male, mean age 33) were also studied. As a group the constipated patients demonstrated no statistically significant delay in emptying during the first 3 hr, although the emptying rate for three of 12 individuals fell outside the normal range. However, at 6 hr after ingestion of the meal, six of 10 patients had residual gastric contents greater than normal-up to 48% solid residue (median: 11% for patients and 0% for controls,P<0.01) and 40% of liquid (median 9% vs 0%P<0.01). Three of four patients with upper gastrointestinal symptoms 6 hr after the meal had gastric retention of solids markedly outside the normal range (48%, 32%, and 16%; normal<4%). Small bowel transit time was assessed as the time for the solid phase to pass from the duodenum to the cecum; the constipated patients demonstrated delayed transit (median: 75 vs 55 min,P<0.01). Effectiveness of small bowel transit was assessed by the proportion of solids in the cecum at the time the stomach had emptied 50% of the solid meal; this was reduced in the patients (median: 6 vs 18%,P<0.01). All patients with normal gastric emptying had normal small bowel transit, and all those with delayed gastric emptying had prolonged small bowel transit. Colonic transit of the radioisotope was slow in all patients (head of the radioisotope column, cecum to stool, median: 96 vs 31 hr,P<0.01). Many patients with severe idiopathic constipation have a disturbance of gastric and small bowel transit that may be related to symptoms and that have implications for treatment.
Gut | 1993
J. M. D. Nightingale; Michael A. Kamm; J. R. M. van der Sijp; G. P. Morris; E. R. Walker; Stephen J. Mather; K. E. Britton; J E Lennard-Jones
Gastric emptying of liquid (orange juice containing technetium-99m (99mTc) labelled antimony sulphide colloid) and solid (570 kcal pancake containing 0.5 mm resin microspheres labelled with Indium-111 (111-In)) was measured in seven patients with jejunum and no colon (jejunal lengths 30-160 cm), six patients with jejunum in continuity with the colon (jejunal length 25-75 cm), and in 12 normal subjects. In patients with no colon early emptying of liquid was rapid (median 25% emptying: 7 v 25 min, no colon v normal, p < 0.05); early gastric emptying of solid was rapid in two (each with less than 100 cm jejunum) and normal in the other five. Gastric emptying of liquid and solid for patients with jejunum in continuity with the colon was normal for the first three hours. There was increased liquid and solid retained in the stomach at six hours in both groups of patients (p < 0.01). Small bowel transit time was faster than in normal subjects for liquid in both groups of patients (p < 0.05) and for solid in those with no colon (p < 0.05). Rapid gastric emptying of liquid may contribute to the large stomal output in patients with a high jejunostomy. Preservation of the colon after a major small intestinal resection exerts a braking effect on the rate of early gastric emptying of liquid.
Abdominal Imaging | 1991
J. M. D. Nightingale; C. I. Bartram; J E Lennard-Jones
The capacity for absorption after a small bowel resection depends upon the remaining length of intestine. This is important in planning nutritional therapy and affects surgical policy should further resection appear necessary. In 18 patients, the remaining small bowel length from the duodenojejunal flexure had been measured at operation and found to be less than 200 cm; this was compared with a measurement obtained by one observer using an opisometer on a subsequent barium follow-through (BaFT) examination. A significant correlation (p < 0.001) of 0.72 was found. Radiographic measurement was easiest when the bowel was short (< 150 cm) and all seen on one film with no overlapping loops. A residual small intestinal length of less than 200 cm measured from a BaFT radiograph is sufficiently accurate to formulate management decisions.
The American Journal of Gastroenterology | 1998
Joost R.M. van der Sijp; Michael A. Kamm; J. M. D. Nightingale; Louis M. A. Akkermans; M.A. Ghatei; Steven R. Bloom; Jan B.M Jansen; J E Lennard-Jones
Objective: This study aimed to determine if there is an abnormality of circulating gastrointestinal hormones in patients with severe idiopathic constipation. Methods: Twelve patients, all female (median age 34 yr) and 12 healthy controls (eight female, median age 32 yr) were studied. A radioisotope-labeled solid/liquid meal was ingested, and the serum hormone response, as well as the relationship between serum hormones and rates of gastric emptying and small intestinal transit, were studied for 180 min postprandially. Results: Somatostatin levels were higher in patients with constipation (basal level, controls vs patients, 31 vs 57 pmol/L, p 0.05) in patients between 30 and 60 min after the meal. The peak found after the meal in normal subjects was absent. Basal levels of pancreatic glucagon correlated with small bowel transit by two different measures: head of meal (r = 0.69, p = 0.03) and cecal filling at the time of 50% gastric emptying (r = 0.84, p = 0.002). No significant differences between the two groups could be found for basal and peak levels at different times and integrated incremental response to the meal for insulin, gastric inhibitory polypeptide (GIP), glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1), cholecystokinin (CCK), gastrin, pancreatic polypeptide (PP), motilin, neurotensin, and peptide tyrosine tyrosine (PYY). Conclusion: Patients with severe idiopathic constipation have specific abnormalities of circulating gut hormones that most likely play a role in gastrointestinal motility and that may be of pathophysiological significance.
Clinical Nutrition | 1992
J. M. D. Nightingale; J.E. Lennard-Jones; E.R. Walker
A patient with a jejunostomy 100 cm from the duodeno-jejunal flexure, following surgery for Crohns disease, had needed parenteral fluids at home for 14 years because of a negative intestinal balance of sodium. Measurements were made of her oral intake and intestinal output during study periods each of 2 days. Loperamide 4 mg QDS, codeine phosphate 60 mg QDS and both together put her into positive intestinal fluid balance but sodium balance remained negative. Both drugs used together were more effective than either used alone. Ranitidine 300 mg BD made no significant difference to her intestinal output. 1 litre of a glucose-electrolyte solution (120 mmol sodium) sipped during the day resulted in sodium balance, but only with the addition of loperamide and codeine phosphate was positive sodium balance achieved (mean 44 mmol/day). This therapy allowed her to dispense with parenteral fluids which have been stopped for the last year.
Nuclear Medicine Communications | 1991
Stephen J. Mather; David W. Ellison; J. M. D. Nightingale; Michael A. Kamm; K. E. Britton
A meal intended for use in gastric emptying studies must be highly reproducible, must provide a normal physiological stimulus in terms of bulk, calorie content and composition and must employ stable radiotracers which accurately reflect in their biodistribution, the fate of the two phases. This is particularly important in a field, such as gastric emptying, where so many variables may influence the results.A conventional pancake and orange juice were chosen as suitable vehicles for the solid and liquid phases. 111In-labelled resin beads were used as the solid-phase marker and a variety of 99Tcm-labelled radiopharmaceuticals including pertechnetate, DTPA and colloid forms were investigated as liquid-phase markers. Prior to administration to patients, the stability of the phases and their interactions in vitro were investigated.The use of 99Tcm-DTPA resulted in a loss of 111In from solid to liquid phase. All non-colloidal markers exhibited a tendency for adsorption onto solid phase. Colloidal markers including rhenium and antimony sulphide colloids showed the truest delineation of the liquid phase.
Journal of Gastroenterology and Hepatology | 2013
Richard B. Gearry; Michael A. Kamm; Ailsa Hart; Paul Bassett; S.M. Gabe; J. M. D. Nightingale
Intestinal failure (IF) is a rare but devastating complication of Crohns disease (CD). The clinical and surgical factors that predispose to IF are poorly understood. The aim of this study was to define clinical factors that predispose to IF.