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Dive into the research topics where Nathalie Rommel is active.

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Featured researches published by Nathalie Rommel.


Journal of Pediatric Gastroenterology and Nutrition | 2003

The complexity of feeding problems in 700 infants and young children presenting to a tertiary care institution

Nathalie Rommel; Anne-Marie De Meyer; Louw Feenstra; Gigi Veereman-Wauters

Background: Feeding problems are common in infants and young children. A multidisciplinary team approach contributes to better patient care. However, few quantitative data on multidisciplinary feeding assessment of children have been published. Objectives: The first aim of this study was to characterize the etiology of feeding difficulties in 700 children referred for assessment of severe feeding difficulty. The authors differentiated medical, oral, and behavioral categories. The second aim was to assess the prevalence of prematurity and dysmaturity in the patients and their relationship to the type of feeding problem. Methods: Clinical data from 700 children aged less than 10 years who were examined for severe feeding problems were analyzed. Results: Close to 50% of the children had a combined medical and oral condition underlying their feeding difficulties. More than half of the children were examined for gastrointestinal conditions, particularly gastroesophageal reflux disease. Behavioral problems were more frequently seen in children aged more than 2 years. The results indicate that oral sensory‐based feeding problems are related to past medical intervention. Children with feeding disorders had a significantly lower birthweight for gestational age. Preterm babies were overrepresented in this population. Conclusions: A multidisciplinary team approach is essential for assessment and management because combined medical and oral problems are the most frequent cause of pediatric feeding problems. A significant relationship was found between the type of feeding problem and age. Infants born preterm and/or with a birthweight below the tenth percentile for gestational age are at greater risk for developing feeding disorders. JPGN 37:75‐84, 2003.


Gastroenterology | 2011

A Method to Objectively Assess Swallow Function in Adults With Suspected Aspiration

Taher Omari; Eddy Dejaeger; Dirk Van Beckevoort; Ann Goeleven; Geoffrey P. Davidson; John Dent; Jan Tack; Nathalie Rommel

BACKGROUND & AIMS Pharyngeal manometry and impedance provide information on swallow function. We developed a new analysis approach for assessment of aspiration risk. METHODS We studied 20 patients (30-95 years old) with suspected aspiration who were referred for videofluoroscopy, along with controls (ages 24-47 years). The pharyngeal phase of liquid bolus swallowing was recorded with manometry and impedance. Data from the first swallow of a bolus and subsequent clearing swallows were analyzed. We scored fluoroscopic evidence of aspiration and investigated a range of computationally derived functional variables. Of these, 4 stood out as having high diagnostic value: peak pressure (PeakP), pressure at nadir impedance (PNadImp), time from nadir impedance to peak pressure (TNadImp-PeakP), and the interval of impedance drop in the distal pharynx (flow interval). RESULTS During 54 liquid, first swallows and 40 clearing swallows, aspiration was observed in 35 (13 patients). Compared to those of controls, patient swallows were characterized by a lower PeakP, higher PNadImp, longer flow interval, and shorter TNadImp-PeakP. A Swallow Risk Index (SRI), designed to identify dysfunctions associated with aspiration, was developed from iterative evaluations of variables. The average first swallow SRI correlated with the average aspiration score (r = 0.846, P < .00001 for Spearman Rank Correlation). An average SRI of 15, when used as a cutoff, predicted aspiration during fluoroscopy for this cohort (κ = 1.0). CONCLUSIONS Pressure-flow variables derived from automated analysis of combined manometric/impedance measurements provide valuable diagnostic information. When combined into an SRI, these measurements are a robust predictor of aspiration.


The American Journal of Gastroenterology | 2011

A Novel Method for the Nonradiological Assessment of Ineffective Swallowing

Taher Omari; Eddy Dejaeger; Dirk Van Beckevoort; Ann Goeleven; Paul De Cock; Ilse Hoffman; Maria-Helena Smet; Geoffrey P. Davidson; Jan Tack; Nathalie Rommel

OBJECTIVES:This validation study evaluates a new manometry impedance-based approach for the objective assessment of pharyngeal function relevant to postswallow bolus residue.METHODS:We studied 23 adult and pediatric dysphagic patients who were all referred for a videofluoroscopy, and compared these patients with 10 adult controls. The pharyngeal phase of swallowing of semisolid boluses was recorded with manometry and impedance. Fluoroscopic evidence of postswallow bolus residue was scored. Pharyngeal pressure impedance profiles were analyzed. Computational algorithms measured peak pressure (Peak P), pressure at nadir impedance (PNadImp), time from nadir impedance to PeakP (PNadImp–PeakP), the duration of impedance drop in the distal pharynx (flow interval), upper esophaghageal sphincter (UES) relaxation interval (UES-RI), nadir UES pressure (NadUESP), UES intrabolus pressure (UES-IBP), and UES resistance. A swallow risk index (SRI) was derived by the formula: SRI=(FI × PNadImp)/(PeakP × (TNadImp-PeakP+1)) × 100.RESULTS:In all, 76 patient swallows (35 with residue) and 39 control swallows (12 with residue) were analyzed. Different functional variables were found to be altered in relation to residue. In both controls and patients, flow interval was longer in relation to residue. In controls, but not patients, residue was associated with an increased PNadImp (suggestive of increased pharyngeal IBP). Controls with residue had increased UES-IBP, NadUESP, and UES resistance compared with patients with residue. Residue in patients was related to a prolonged UES-RI. The SRI was elevated in relation to residue in both controls and patients and an average SRI of 9 was optimally predictive of residue (sensitivity 75% and specificity 80%).CONCLUSIONS:We present novel findings in control subjects and dysphagic patients showing that combined manometry and impedance recordings can be objectively analyzed to derive pressure-flow variables that are altered in relation to the bolus residual and can be combined to predict ineffective pharyngeal swallowing.


Cerebral Cortex | 2012

Is There a Common Neuroanatomical Substrate of Language Deficit between Autism Spectrum Disorder and Specific Language Impairment

Judith Verhoeven; Nathalie Rommel; Elena Prodi; Alexander Leemans; Inge Zink; Ellen Vandewalle; Ilse Noens; Johan Wagemans; Jean Steyaert; Bart Boets; Ann Van de Winckel; Paul De Cock; Lieven Lagae; Stefan Sunaert

Discussion of an overlap between specific language impairment (SLI) and autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is on going. The most intriguing overlap between both phenotypes is the similarity in the observed language deficits described in SLI and a subgroup of ASD with co-occurring linguistic impairment, ASD-LI. Examining whether a similar neuroanatomical substrate underlies this phenotypical linguistic overlap, we studied the white matter microstructural properties of the superior longitudinal fascicle (SLF) of 19 ASD-LI adolescents (mean age 13.8 ± 1.6 years) and 21 age-matched controls and compared them with 13 SLI children (mean age 10.1 ± 0.4 years) and 12 age-matched controls. A linguistic profile assessment and a diffusion tensor imaging analysis of the SLF were performed. Linguistic testing revealed a mixed receptive-expressive disorder profile in both groups, confirming their overlap at phenotypical level. At neuroanatomical level, no significant differences in mean SLF fractional anisotropy (FA) and mean SLF apparent diffusion coefficient values between ASD-LI participants and controls were seen. By contrast, the mean SLF FA was significantly reduced in the SLI children as compared with their controls. The observation of structural SLF disturbances in SLI but not in ASD-LI suggests the existence of a different neuroanatomical substrate for the language deficits in both disorders.


Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology | 2011

Reproducibility and Agreement of Pharyngeal Automated Impedance Manometry With Videofluoroscopy

Taher Omari; Athanasios Papathanasopoulos; Eddy Dejaeger; Lucas Wauters; Emidio Scarpellini; Rita Vos; Sarah Slootmaekers; Veerle Seghers; Liesbeth Cornelissen; Ann Goeleven; Jan Tack; Nathalie Rommel

BACKGROUND & AIMS Automated impedance manometry analysis (AIM) measures swallow function variables that define bolus timing, intrabolus pressure, contractile vigor, and bolus presence; these are combined to derive a swallow risk index (SRI) that is correlated with pharyngeal dysfunction and aspiration. We assessed intra-rater and inter-rater reproducibility of AIM analysis-derived variables; the diagnostic accuracy of AIM-based criteria for detecting aspiration was determined by using expertly scored videofluoroscopy as the standard. METHODS Data on 50 bolus swallows of 10 mL each were randomly selected from a database of swallows that were simultaneously recorded with impedance, manometry, and videofluoroscopy. Data were divided into 5 subgroups of 10 swallows for analysis: 10 dysphagic liquid, 10 dysphagic liquid with aspiration, 10 dysphagic semisolid, 10 control liquid, and 10 control semisolid. Repeat analyses were performed by 10 observers with varying levels of expertise in manometry by using purpose-designed software (AIMplot). Swallow videos were scored by 4 experts by using the penetration-aspiration scale (PAS) score. Reproducibility of calculation of swallow function variables and the SRI and PAS was assessed by using intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC). The majority consensus of expert PAS scores was used to dichotomously define aspiration (consensus PAS >3). Observer analyses were compared by Cohen κ statistical analysis. RESULTS The intra-rater and inter-rater reproducibility of swallow function variables was high (SRI mean intra-rater ICC, 0.97 and mean inter-rater ICC, 0.91). SRI >15-20 was optimal for detecting the presence of aspiration during liquid bolus swallows with an almost perfect agreement with expert scoring of videofluoroscopy (κ > 0.8). CONCLUSIONS AIM analysis has high intra-rater and inter-rater reproducibility, and among observers of varying expertise, SRI predicts the presence of aspiration.


Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology | 2013

Botulinum toxin reduces Dysphagia in patients with nonachalasia primary esophageal motility disorders.

Tim Vanuytsel; Raf Bisschops; Ricard Farré; Ans Pauwels; Lieselot Holvoet; Joris Arts; Philip Caenepeel; Dominiek De Wulf; Kostas Mimidis; Nathalie Rommel; Jan Tack

BACKGROUND & AIMS Endoscopic injection of botulinum toxin (BTX) has shown benefits for patients with diffuse esophageal spasm (DES) and nutcracker esophagus (NE) in small uncontrolled trials. We investigated the effect of BTX on symptoms of patients with DES or NE and assessed manometry findings in a prospective, double-blind, randomized, controlled study. METHODS We assessed 22 patients with dysphagia-predominant, manometry-confirmed DES or NE (6 men; age, 63 ± 2 y) at a tertiary care medical center. Patients were given injections of BTX (8 × 12.5 U) or saline (8 × 0.5 mL) in 4 quadrants, at 2 and 7 cm above the esophagogastric junction. After 1 month, patients crossed over between groups and received endoscopic injections of BTX or saline. When the study began and 4 weeks after each injection, the patients were assessed by esophageal manometry and completed a symptom questionnaire (to determine solid and liquid dysphagia, chest pain, and regurgitation and heartburn; all scored 0-4). Responders were defined based on modified Vantrappen criteria for achalasia. RESULTS After BTX injections, patients had significant decreases in total symptom scores (sum of solid and liquid dysphagia and chest pain; from 7.6 ± 0.7 to 4.8 ± 0.8; P = .01); this decrease was not observed in patients who received saline injections. Moreover, BTX injection stabilized unintentional weight loss (weight gain of 0.3 ± 0.3 after BTX injection vs further weight loss of 1.6 ± 0.5 kg after saline injection; P = .01). Fifty percent of patients had a response 1 month after BTX injection, compared with 10% after saline injection (P = .04); 30% still had a response 1 year after BTX injection. BTX injection also caused a significant decrease in the mean esophagogastric junction pressure, compared with baseline (15.8 ± 1.7 vs 24.0 ± 2.8 mm Hg; P = .02). CONCLUSIONS In a prospective controlled study of patients with DES and NE, injections of BTX reduced symptoms and stabilized unintentional weight loss. TRIAL REGISTRY http://www.targid.eu, ML2669, ML6294.


Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology | 2012

Baclofen Improves Symptoms and Reduces Postprandial Flow Events in Patients With Rumination and Supragastric Belching

Kathleen Blondeau; Veerle Boecxstaens; Nathalie Rommel; R Farre; Stephanie Depeyper; Lieselot Holvoet; Guy E. Boeckxstaens; Jan Tack

BACKGROUND & AIMS In patients with clinically suspected rumination, esophageal impedance manometry differentiates episodes of rumination (involuntary straining with intragastric pressure increases) from aerophagia/supragastric belching. Treatment options are limited and focused on behavioral therapy. Baclofen, an agonist of the γ-aminobutyric acid B receptor, increases lower esophageal sphincter pressure and decreases swallowing rate. We investigated its effects in these patients. METHODS High-resolution manometry-impedance recordings were taken from 12 patients (8 women; mean age, 45 years; range, 18-89 years) with clinically suspected rumination or supragastric belching before and during treatment with baclofen (10 mg, 3 times daily). After 30 minutes of recordings, patients received a 1000-kcal solid meal; recordings were then continued for 1 hour. Patients were asked to register symptoms with an event marker. The number of symptoms registered and number and type of flow events were compared before and during treatment. RESULTS An average of 20 symptom markers (range, 14-34) were recorded at baseline (10 [range, 4-25] for belching and 9 [range, 0-11] for regurgitation). This was significantly reduced to 6 (range, 2-22) (3 [range, 1-15] for belching and 1 [range, 0-13] for regurgitation) during baclofen treatment (P = .01). The number of flow events (473 at baseline [42 reflux, 192 rumination, 188 supragastric belching, and 42 aerophagia]) was significantly reduced to 282 (32 reflux, 99 rumination, 123 supragastric belching, and 13 aerophagia) during baclofen therapy (P = .02). The reduction in flow events correlated with the increase in lower esophageal sphincter pressure (r = -0.62; P = .03) and reduction in swallowing frequency (r = 0.64; P = .02). CONCLUSIONS Baclofen is an effective treatment for patients with rumination or supragastric belching/aerophagia.


NeuroImage: Clinical | 2014

Altered functional connectivity of the language network in ASD: Role of classical language areas and cerebellum

Marjolein Verly; Judith Verhoeven; Inge Zink; Dante Mantini; Ronald Peeters; Sabine Deprez; Louise Emsell; Bart Boets; Ilse Noens; Jean Steyaert; Lieven Lagae; Paul De Cock; Nathalie Rommel; Stefan Sunaert

The development of language, social interaction and communicative skills is remarkably different in the child with autism spectrum disorder (ASD). Atypical brain connectivity has frequently been reported in this patient population. However, the neural correlates underlying their disrupted language development and functioning are still poorly understood. Using resting state fMRI, we investigated the functional connectivity properties of the language network in a group of ASD patients with clear comorbid language impairment (ASD-LI; N = 19) and compared them to the language related connectivity properties of 23 age-matched typically developing children. A verb generation task was used to determine language components commonly active in both groups. Eight joint language components were identified and subsequently used as seeds in a resting state analysis. Interestingly, both the interregional and the seed-based whole brain connectivity analysis showed preserved connectivity between the classical intrahemispheric language centers, Wernickes and Brocas areas. In contrast however, a marked loss of functional connectivity was found between the right cerebellar region and the supratentorial regulatory language areas. Also, the connectivity between the interhemispheric Broca regions and modulatory control dorsolateral prefrontal region was found to be decreased. This disruption of normal modulatory control and automation function by the cerebellum may underlie the abnormal language function in children with ASD-LI.


Alimentary Pharmacology & Therapeutics | 2011

Review article: the pathophysiology, differential diagnosis and management of rumination syndrome

Jan Tack; Kathleen Blondeau; Veerle Boecxstaens; Nathalie Rommel

Aliment Pharmacol Ther 2011; 33: 782–788


Neurogastroenterology and Motility | 2014

Automated impedance manometry analysis as a method to assess esophageal function

Nathalie Rommel; Lukas Van Oudenhove; Jan Tack; Taher Omari

Diagnostic evaluation of non‐achalasia esophageal dysphagia remains challenging because of a lack of a clear relationship between symptoms, esophageal contraction patterns, and esophageal bolus flow. This study evaluates a novel approach to pressure‐impedance analysis called automated impedance manometry (AIM) analysis in relation to bolus characteristics, Chicago classification metrics, bolus perception, and dysphagia.

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Taher Omari

University of Adelaide

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Jan Tack

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Eddy Dejaeger

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Margot Selleslagh

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Charlotte Scheerens

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Stefan Sunaert

Université catholique de Louvain

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Lieven Lagae

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Inge Zink

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Marjolein Verly

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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