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Dive into the research topics where Oliver Goetze is active.

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Featured researches published by Oliver Goetze.


Neurogastroenterology and Motility | 2006

Predictors of gastric emptying in Parkinson's disease

Oliver Goetze; Alice Nikodem; J. Wiezcorek; M. Banasch; H. Przuntek; Thomas Mueller; Wolfgang Schmidt; Dirk Woitalla

Abstract  Predictors of gastric emptying (GE) in patients with idiopathic Parkinsons disease (PD) of a solid and liquid meal are not well defined. For measurement of GE 80 patients with PD were randomly assigned to receive either a solid meal (250 kcal) containing 13C‐octanoate (n = 40) or a liquid meal (315 kcal) with 13C‐acetate (n = 40). All patient groups were off medication affecting motility and were matched for age, gender, body mass index, disease duration and severity, using Unified Parkinsons Disease Rating Scale (UPDRS). Gastric emptying was compared with a healthy control group (n = 40). Multiple regression analysis was used to determine predictors of gastric emptying. Exactly 88% and 38% of PD patients had delayed GE of solids and liquids respectively. Solid and liquid emptying was similar in women and men. There were no differences in GE in PD patients <65 years of age when compared with patients ≥65 years. Multiple regression analysis showed that motor handicaps such as rigour and action tremor are independent predictors of solid GE (r = 0.68, P < 0.001). The severity of motor impairment, but not any other neurological symptom, as assessed by UPDRS is associated with gastroparesis in PD and solid emptying is more likely to be delayed.


Clinical Neuropharmacology | 2006

Impact of gastric emptying on levodopa pharmacokinetics in Parkinson disease patients.

Thomas J. J. Müller; Christoph Erdmann; Dirk Bremen; Wolfgang Schmidt; Siegfried Muhlack; Dirk Woitalla; Oliver Goetze

Abstract: Adjunction of the catechol-O-methyltransferase (COMT) inhibitor entacapone (EN) to levodopa/carbidopa (LD/CD) improves motor symptoms in patients with Parkinson disease (PD) by a prolonged elimination of LD. But it is not known whether EN addition influences gastric emptying and thus LD pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics. Objectives were to simultaneously determine plasma LD elimination, gastric emptying, and clinical response after a single intake of the same LD dosage as LD/CD-or as (LD/CD/EN) formulation on 2 consecutive days. In both groups, PD patients with delayed gastric emptying had significant lower LD plasma concentrations. Addition of EN did not influence gastric emptying but significantly improved motor response, which was not different for patients with delayed gastric emptying. However, with and without EN adjunction gastric emptying distinctly contributes to the variability of plasma LD bioavailability. This may impact LD delivery to the brain and thus motor response in PD patients. Therefore, fine tuning of LD application, which considers gastric emptying, becomes more and more essential in advanced PD stages with a reduced striatal neuronal dopamine capacity, which is responsible for maintenance of motor response in early PD patients.


Neuroscience Letters | 2005

Impaired gastric emptying of a solid test meal in patients with Parkinson's disease using 13C-sodium octanoate breath test

Oliver Goetze; Joerg Wieczorek; Thomas Mueller; H. Przuntek; Wolfgang Schmidt; Dirk Woitalla

Up to now gastric emptying in patients with Parkinsons disease was determined by radioscintigraphy. The 13C-sodium octanoate breath test (OBT) has been established for the non-invasive evaluation of gastric emptying with a solid test meal. The aim of the study was to evaluate the OBT in patients with Parkinsons disease and to investigate the prevalence of delayed gastric emptying for solids in PD and the relationship to clinical staging patterns. Twenty-two healthy subjects and 36 patients with different clinical stages of PD classified using Hoehn and Yahr (H&Y) and Unified Parkinsons Disease Rating Scale (UPDRS) were studied. Each fasting control and patient received a solid test meal (241 kcal) labelled with 100 mg of 13C-sodium octanoate. Breath samples were obtained before substrate administration and then in 15-min intervals over 4 h. The 13CO2/12CO2 ratio was determined in each breath sample as delta over baseline. Time to peak (t(peak)), gastric half emptying time (t1/2b), lag phase (t(lagb)) and gastric emptying coefficient (GEC) were calculated. Significant differences in t(peak), t1/2b, t(lagb) and GEC were found between patients and healthy volunteers (p<0.0001), with a 60% delay in gastric half emptying time in the patient group. Gastric half emptying time was different between clinical disease groups (H&Y 0-2 versus H&Y 2.5-5, p=0.001; UPDRS 0-30 versus UPDRS 61-92, p<0.05). The OBT detects a significant delay in gastric emptying of a solid test meal in patients with PD. Delayed gastric emptying for solids is associated with disease severity.


Journal of Magnetic Resonance Imaging | 2006

Gastric motor function and emptying in the right decubitus and seated body position as assessed by magnetic resonance imaging

Reto Treier; Andreas Steingoetter; Dominik Weishaupt; Oliver Goetze; Peter Boesiger; Michael Fried; Werner Schwizer

To determine the effect of the right decubitus lying body position (RP) on relevant parameters of human gastric motor function in healthy volunteers.


Neurogastroenterology and Motility | 2009

The effect of gastric secretion on gastric physiology and emptying in the fasted and fed state assessed by magnetic resonance imaging

Oliver Goetze; Reto Treier; Mark Fox; Andreas Steingoetter; Michael Fried; Peter Boesiger; Werner Schwizer

Abstract  Conventional measurement of gastric secretion is invasive and cannot assess the intra‐gastric distribution of gastric contents or the effects of secretion on gastric function. This study assessed the effect of gastric secretion on gastric volume responses and emptying (GE) using a validated fast T1 mapping magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) technique. Twelve healthy participants were studied in the fasted state and after 200 kcal Gadolinium‐DOTA labelled glucose meal during intravenous infusion of pentagastrin or placebo in double‐blind, randomized order. Total gastric volume (TGV) and gastric content volume (GCV) was assessed by MRI volume scans and secretion by fast T1 mapping. Data was described by the κ‐coefficient (volume change after meal ingestion), by GE half time (T50) and maximal GE rate (GERmax) derived all from a GE model. Pentagastrin increased GCV and TGV compared to placebo [κ(GCV):1.6 ± 0.1 vs 0.6 ± 0.1; κ(TGV): 1.6 ± 0.1 vs 0.7 ± 0.1; P < 0.001]. T1 maps revealed a secretion layer above the meal, the volume of which was associated with κ (R2 = 83%, P < 0.001). TGV and GCV change were similar in both conditions (κ; P = ns). T50 was higher for pentagastrin than for placebo (84 ± 7 vs 56 ± 4min, P < 0.001); however, GERmax was similar (5.9 ± 0.6 vs 4.9 ± 0.4 mL min−1, P = ns). This study shows volume and distribution of gastric secretion can be quantified in‐vivo by non‐invasive MRI T1 mapping. Increased GCV drove TGV accommodation without evidence of a direct effect of pentagastrin or excess acid on gastric function. Secretion increases GCV thus prolongs GE as assessed by T50; however, GE rate is unchanged.


British Journal of Nutrition | 2010

Excellent agreement between genetic and hydrogen breath tests for lactase deficiency and the role of extended symptom assessment

Daniel Pohl; E. Savarino; M. Hersberger; Z. Behlis; B. Stutz; Oliver Goetze; A. v. Eckardstein; Michael Fried; Radu Tutuian

Clinical manifestations of lactase (LCT) deficiency include intestinal and extra-intestinal symptoms. Lactose hydrogen breath test (H2-BT) is considered the gold standard to evaluate LCT deficiency (LD). Recently, the single-nucleotide polymorphism C/T(-13910) has been associated with LD. The objectives of the present study were to evaluate the agreement between genetic testing of LCT C/T(-13910) and lactose H2-BT, and the diagnostic value of extended symptom assessment. Of the 201 patients included in the study, 194 (139 females; mean age 38, range 17-79 years, and 55 males, mean age 38, range 18-68 years) patients with clinical suspicion of LD underwent a 3-4 h H2-BT and genetic testing for LCT C/T(-13910). Patients rated five intestinal and four extra-intestinal symptoms during the H2-BT and then at home for the following 48 h. Declaring H2-BT as the gold standard, the CC(-13910) genotype had a sensitivity of 97% and a specificity of 95% with a κ of 0.9 in diagnosing LCT deficiency. Patients with LD had more intense intestinal symptoms 4 h following the lactose challenge included in the H2-BT. We found no difference in the intensity of extra-intestinal symptoms between patients with and without LD. Symptom assessment yielded differences for intestinal symptoms abdominal pain, bloating, borborygmi and diarrhoea between 120 min and 4 h after oral lactose challenge. Extra-intestinal symptoms (dizziness, headache and myalgia) and extension of symptom assessment up to 48 h did not consistently show different results. In conclusion, genetic testing has an excellent agreement with the standard lactose H2-BT, and it may replace breath testing for the diagnosis of LD. Extended symptom scores and assessment of extra-intestinal symptoms have limited diagnostic value in the evaluation of LD.


Neurogastroenterology and Motility | 2007

Intersubject and intrasubject variability of gastric volumes in response to isocaloric liquid meals in functional dyspepsia and health

Heiko Fruehauf; Oliver Goetze; Andreas Steingoetter; Monika A. Kwiatek; Peter Boesiger; Miriam Thumshirn; Werner Schwizer; Michael Fried

Abstract  Gastric emptying (GE) has a considerable variability, but data on reproducibility of gastric volume measurements are sparse. We aimed to study the reproducibility of postprandial gastric volume responses and GE using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in healthy controls (HC) and patients with functional dyspepsia (FD). Eight HC and eight FD patients underwent a MRI study on two occasions. MR images were acquired in seated position before and up to 120 min after liquid meal administration (200 mL, 300 kcal). Fasting (V0), initial postprandial stomach volumes (V1), volume changes (V1 − V0) and meal emptying half‐times () were determined. Intersubject and intrasubject coefficients of variation (CVinter, CVintra) and Pearsons correlation coefficients (r) were calculated. on both occasions were (mean ± SD) 113 ± 28 and 121 ± 30 min in HC (ns) and 127 ± 31 and 128 ± 37 min in FD (ns), respectively. In HC, CVinter, CVintra, r were 31%, 23%, 0.49 for V0; 13%, 7%, 0.68 for V1; 10%, 4%, 0.71 for V1 − V0 and 25%, 7%, 0.90 for . In FD these parameters were for V0: 42%, 41%, −0.06; for V1: 18%, 10%, 0.40; for V1 − V0: 20%, 14%, 0.74 and for : 26%, 10%, 0.84. The stomach accommodates to a given meal volume, resulting in similar and reproducible postprandial volumes within‐ and between‐subjects. MRI provides reproducible measurements of gastric volume responses in health and disease.


The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2009

Hyperglycemia Acutely Lowers the Postprandial Excursions of Glucagon-Like Peptide-1 and Gastric Inhibitory Polypeptide in Humans

Kirsten Vollmer; Husai Gardiwal; Bjoern A. Menge; Oliver Goetze; Carolyn F. Deacon; Wolfgang Schmidt; Jens J. Holst; Juris J. Meier

INTRODUCTION Impaired secretion of glucagon-like peptide 1 (GLP-1) has been suggested to contribute to the deficient incretin effect in patients with type 2 diabetes. It is unclear whether this is a primary defect or a consequence of the hyperglycemia in type 2 diabetes. We examined whether acute hyperglycemia reduces the postprandial excursions of gastric inhibitory polypeptide (GIP) and GLP-1, and if so, whether this can be attributed to changes in gastric emptying. PATIENTS AND METHODS Fifteen nondiabetic individuals participated in a euglycemic clamp and a hyperglycemic clamp experiment, carried out over 285 min. A mixed meal was ingested after 45 min. Plasma concentrations of glucose, insulin, C-peptide, glucagon, triglycerides, GIP, and GLP-1 were determined, and gastric emptying was assessed using a (13)C-octanoate breath test. RESULTS Glucose levels were 160 +/- 1 mg/dl during the hyperglycemic clamp experiments and 83 +/- 3 mg/dl during the euglycemia (P < 0.0001). Glucose infusion rates were higher during hyperglycemia, but meal ingestion led to a decline in glucose requirements in both experiments (P < 0.0001). Insulin and C-peptide levels were higher during the hyperglycemic clamp experiments (P < 0.0001), whereas glucagon levels were higher during euglycemia (P < 0.0001). The postprandial increases in GIP and GLP-1 concentrations were 46 and 52% lower during the experiments with hyperglycemia (P = 0.0017 and P = 0.021). Hyperglycemia also elicited a significant delay in gastric emptying (P < 0.0001). CONCLUSIONS Hyperglycemia acutely reduces the postprandial levels of GIP and GLP-1, possibly through a deceleration of gastric emptying. This supports the concept that reduced incretin levels in some patients with type 2 diabetes are a consequence rather than a cause of type 2 diabetes.


Neurogastroenterology and Motility | 2012

Measuring the interaction of meal and gastric secretion: a combined quantitative magnetic resonance imaging and pharmacokinetic modeling approach

Matthias Sauter; Jelena Curcic; Dieter Menne; Oliver Goetze; Michael Fried; Werner Schwizer; Andreas Steingoetter

Background  The stimulation and intragastric accumulation of gastric secretion has been recognized as an important factor in gastroesophageal reflux disease. However, the interaction of gastric secretion and meal emptying has not been fully understood. Current methods to assess gastric secretion are either invasive or unable to provide information on its volume, distribution and dynamics. The aim of this study was to quantify the interaction between meal emptying and meal induced gastric secretion by using quantitative magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and pharmacokinetic analysis.


Alimentary Pharmacology & Therapeutics | 2007

13C-methacetin breath test as a quantitative liver function test in patients with chronic hepatitis C infection: continuous automatic molecular correlation spectroscopy compared to isotopic ratio mass spectrometry

Oliver Goetze; N. Selzner; Heiko Fruehauf; Michael Fried; T. Gerlach; Beat Müllhaupt

Background The 13C‐methacetin breath test (MBT) has been proposed for the non‐invasive evaluation of hepatic microsomal activity.

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Mark Fox

University of Zurich

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