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Dive into the research topics where Russell B. Hanson is active.

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Featured researches published by Russell B. Hanson.


American Journal of Physiology-gastrointestinal and Liver Physiology | 1997

Adrenergic modulation of human colonic motor and sensory function

Adil E. Bharucha; Michael Camilleri; Alan R. Zinsmeister; Russell B. Hanson

The effects of pharmacological modulation of adrenergic receptors on colonic motor and sensory function are unclear. We studied 40 healthy volunteers in a single-blind design; 12 received saline, and the remaining 28 received either clonidine, yohimbine, phenylephrine, or ritodrine. A barostat-manometric assembly in the left colon recorded drug effects on fasting and postprandial motor function, compliance, and sensation in response to standardized phasic balloon distensions delivered in random order. Clonidine reduced and yohimbine increased fasting, but not postprandial tone, by 63.2 ± 22.3% and 24.8 ± 8.8% (SE), respectively. Clonidine tended to reduce fasting phasic activity in the descending and sigmoid colon. A power exponential model provided the best fit to the compliance curve. Clonidine significantly increased colonic compliance. Clonidine reduced and yohimbine increased colonic perception of pain but not gas sensation during distension. Phenylephrine and ritodrine did not influence colonic motor or sensory function in the present studies. Thus α2-receptors modulate fasting colonic tone and compliance and alter perception of pain but not gas during mechanical stimulation of the colon.


Gastroenterology | 1995

Psychosensory modulation of colonic sensation in the human transverse and sigmoid colon

M J Ford; Michael Camilleri; Alan R. Zinsmeister; Russell B. Hanson

BACKGROUND & AIMS Psychosensory stimulation increases the perception of stimuli in different regions of the human colon. The aim of this study was to determine the perception of pain and gas during distention of two colonic regions in healthy volunteers during stress and relaxation. METHODS In 22 healthy subjects, phasic distentions of transverse and sigmoid colon were performed using infinitely compliant balloons, and symptoms were measured before and during one of three randomized treatments: sham or active relaxation or mental stress. Anxiety ratings and somatic cold-pain sensitivity were included in a multivariate regression model. RESULTS Mental stress increased levels of anxiety (P < 0.05) and the sensation of gas (P < 0.01), but not pain (P = NS), during transverse colon distentions and the sensations of gas and pain during sigmoid distentions (P < 0.05). Active relaxation reduced only sensation of gas in the sigmoid colon. Somatic pain sensitivity and pretreatment colonic sensory scores were significantly associated with the sensory scores during treatments. CONCLUSIONS Psychosensory stimulation increases colonic sensation during short-term distention in two regions of the human colon; relaxation alone exerts a smaller influence on sensations arising in the sigmoid colon.


Gut | 1999

Gastric accommodation in non-ulcer dyspepsia and the roles of Helicobacter pylori infection and vagal function.

Miriam Thumshirn; Michael Camilleri; Stuart B. Saslow; D E Williams; Duane Burton; Russell B. Hanson

Background The pathophysiological mechanisms in non-ulcer dyspepsia are incompletely understood. Aims To compare gastric motor and sensory functions in Helicobacter pyloripositive or negative patients with non-ulcer dyspepsia. Patients Seventeen patients with non-ulcer dyspepsia and 16 asymptomatic controls. Methods The following were evaluated: gastrointestinal symptoms; gastric emptying and orocaecal transit of solids; abdominal vagal function; gastric compliance; fasting and postprandial gastric tone and phasic contractions; symptoms during ingestion of cold water and during the distension of an intragastric bag; and somatic sensitivity and personality profile (Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory, MMPI). Results Gastric accommodation was reduced in H pylori negative dyspeptics relative to controls; the degree of accommodation was unrelated toH pylori status in dyspeptics. Increased postprandial gastric sensation was more frequent amongH pylori positive patients (4/5H pylori positive versus 4/12H pylori negative patients). Intragastric meal distribution and orocaecal transit were normal; gastric emptying at four hours was abnormal in 4/17 patients. Vagal dysfunction was rare. Eight of 17 patients had somatisation or depression on MMPI. Conclusion Impaired gastric accommodation is frequent in non-ulcer dyspepsia and seems to be unrelated to vagal efferent dysfunction. H pylori infection does not seem to influence gastric accommodation, but is associated with heightened sensitivity in dyspeptics. Therapeutic approaches that restore normal postprandial accommodation and gastric sensitivity should be tested in non-ulcer dyspepsia.


American Journal of Physiology-gastrointestinal and Liver Physiology | 1998

Rectal tone, distensibility, and perception: reproducibility and response to different distensions

H. F. Hammer; Sidney F. Phillips; Michael Camilleri; Russell B. Hanson

Increasing interest is focusing on the role of intestinal tone, distensibility, and mechanosensation in the genesis of abdominal symptoms. Experimental approaches usually feature balloon distension of the bowel with measurements of perception, tone, and compliance and/or elastance; however, the methodologies are standardized incompletely. We examined the reproducibility of repeated assessments of sensory perception, basal tone, and compliance and/or elastance of the rectum during distension. We also evaluated the response to inflations that varied in regard to control of pressure or volume, pattern of distension, and rate of inflation. Five healthy volunteers were studied under two separate protocols. The first featured a series of experiments on each of 5 days; the other consisted of 2 separate days of study. Repeated distensions evoked reproducible responses of sensation and compliance and/or elastance on a single day, providing a conditioning distension preceded them. Day-to-day variability was also sufficiently small to allow valid comparisons to be made on different days in healthy persons. The configuration of the distension profile (phasic, staircase, or ramp) and the rate of inflation (from 1 to 40 ml/s) had little effect on distensibility or perception. Perceptions were sometimes transient and sometimes constant, but no relationship was found between these temporal features and the magnitude of the stimulus. These observations help provide a basis as to how the responses to rectal distension can be best studied.Increasing interest is focusing on the role of intestinal tone, distensibility, and mechanosensation in the genesis of abdominal symptoms. Experimental approaches usually feature balloon distension of the bowel with measurements of perception, tone, and compliance and/or elastance; however, the methodologies are standardized incompletely. We examined the reproducibility of repeated assessments of sensory perception, basal tone, and compliance and/or elastance of the rectum during distension. We also evaluated the response to inflations that varied in regard to control of pressure or volume, pattern of distension, and rate of inflation. Five healthy volunteers were studied under two separate protocols. The first featured a series of experiments on each of 5 days; the other consisted of 2 separate days of study. Repeated distensions evoked reproducible responses of sensation and compliance and/or elastance on a single day, providing a conditioning distension preceded them. Day-to-day variability was also sufficiently small to allow valid comparisons to be made on different days in healthy persons. The configuration of the distension profile (phasic, staircase, or ramp) and the rate of inflation (from 1 to 40 ml/s) had little effect on distensibility or perception. Perceptions were sometimes transient and sometimes constant, but no relationship was found between these temporal features and the magnitude of the stimulus. These observations help provide a basis as to how the responses to rectal distension can be best studied.


Gastroenterology | 1991

Variation of Muscle Tone in the Human Colon

Charles J. Steadman; Sidney F. Phillips; Michael Camilleri; Anne C. Haddad; Russell B. Hanson

It was hypothesized that the human colon is able to relax or constrict to receive materials arriving from above or to hasten distal passage of contents. Dilatation is also a feature of several pathophysiological states and, therefore, the propensity of the colon to dilate might be important in disease. An electromechanical barostat was applied to the human colon, and changes in colonic tone were recorded in response to physiological perturbations. In 16 studies of 14 healthy volunteers, the colon was prepared for colonoscopy and a manometry-barostat assembly was positioned in the ascending (n = 5), transverse (n = 4), or descending (n = 7) colon. The influences of food and overnight sleep were recorded. The barostat continuously monitored, at a constant pressure, the volume of air within a highly compliant 10-cm bag. Changes in tone, as reflected by changes in bag volume, were usually unassociated with waves of intraluminal pressure recorded from adjacent manometric sites. Thus, the barostat revealed a motor phenomenon not readily apparent by conventional manometry. Food caused an immediate though slowly progressive increase in tone; however, bag volumes were greatest during overnight sleep and were decreased on waking. The barostat has the potential to explore another possibly important aspect of colonic function in humans.


Gut | 1994

Serotonergic mediation of postprandial colonic tonic and phasic responses in humans.

M. R. Von Der Ohe; Russell B. Hanson; Michael Camilleri

This study examined the hypothesis that 5HT3 mechanisms mediate the postprandial gastrocolonic response in humans. Fasting and postprandial colonic tone and motility were studied in 12 healthy volunteers and the effects of a selective 5HT3 antagonist, ondansetron assessed in a double blind, randomised, placebo controlled fashion. A manometry barostat assembly was positioned in the transverse or descending colon to quantitate contractile activity fasting, after drug infusion and postprandially after a 1000 kcal meal. Fasting colonic tone and motility indices were similar in the placebo and ondansetron groups; ondansetron did not affect fasting motility. The placebo group showed a significant reduction in barostat balloon volume (signifying increased tone) from 232 ml (median, interquartile range (IQR) 179-261) during fasting to 181 ml (median, IQR 128-208) (postprandially) (p = 0.02). In contrast, the ondansetron group did not have a tonic colonic response (median 248 ml (IQR 199-300) fasting to median, 226 ml (IQR 185-290) postprandially) after the meal. Phasic volume events measured by the barostat increased postprandially in both groups. Postprandial motor activity measured by manometry increased significantly in the placebo group, but not in the ondansetron group. In conclusion, a 5HT3 mechanism participates in the physiological contractile responses in the human transverse and descending colon after ingestion of a high energy meal.


Mayo Clinic Proceedings | 1992

Colonic Tone and Motility in Patients With Irritable Bowel Syndrome

Mario Vassallo; Michael Camilleri; Sidney F. Phillips; Charles J. Steadman; Nicholas J. Talley; Russell B. Hanson; Anne C. Haddad

In this study, our aim was to test the hypothesis that colonic tone is abnormal in patients with irritable bowel syndrome (IBS). We studied eight patients with IBS and eight age-matched asymptomatic control subjects, in whom tone and motility were measured by an electronic barostat and by pneumohydraulic perfusion manometry, respectively. Tone and motility were recorded from the descending colon for a 14-hour period--3 hours awake, 7 hours asleep, 2 hours fasting after awakening, and 2 hours postprandially. In patients with IBS and in healthy subjects, colonic tone decreased by up to 50% during sleep and increased promptly on awakening. Fasting colonic tone (as quantified by the volume in the barostat balloon) in the awake state was not significantly higher in patients with IBS than it was in healthy subjects (125 +/- 13 versus 152 +/- 15 ml; P = 0.19). Tone increased postprandially in both study groups, and the increase was greater in healthy subjects than it was in patients with IBS (P < 0.05). The motility index during fasting was greater in patients with IBS than it was in healthy control subjects (3.2 +/- 0.6 versus 1.6 +/- 0.4; P = 0.05), and the postprandial increase in motility index was greater in the healthy subjects. Preprandially and postprandially, we noted a trend for high-amplitude prolonged contractions to be more frequent in patients with IBS than in healthy subjects. We conclude that colonic tone in patients with IBS showed the same nocturnal and postprandial variations as it did in healthy subjects.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Gut | 1995

Differences in colonic tone and phasic response to a meal in the transverse and sigmoid human colon.

M J Ford; Michael Camilleri; Julie A. Wiste; Russell B. Hanson

It is not yet clear whether the regional differences in the physical properties of the colon influence its motor responses. Tonic and phasic colonic motility and compliance of the transverse and sigmoid colon were therefore assessed using a combined barostat-manometry assembly in 22 healthy subjects. Measured colonic compliance was corrected by subtraction of the compliance of the closed barostat system. The mean (SEM) preprandial colonic volumes in the transverse and sigmoid colon were similar (150 (12) and 128 (13) ml, p = NS), corresponding to calculated mean (SEM) colonic diameters of 4.3 cm and 4.0 cm respectively. The mean increase in colonic tone postprandially was significantly greater in the transverse (24.1% (3.5)) than in the sigmoid colon (13.1% (3.0), p < 0.01). The mean increase in phasic contractility was significantly greater, however, in the sigmoid than in the transverse colon (1270 (210) and 425 (60) mm Hg/90 min respectively, p < 0.01). Compliance was greater in the transverse than sigmoid colon (7.6 (0.44) and 4.1 (0.15) ml/mm Hg, p < 0.001). The fasting volume of the colon was significantly correlated with the magnitude of the tonic response to the meal in the transverse and sigmoid colon (p < 0.001 for both). In conclusion, there are quantitatively different but qualitatively similar phasic and tonic responses to the meal in the two colonic regions. Differences in the viscoelastic and luminal dimensions may partly account for these differences in tonic responses.


Gut | 1992

Control of muscle tone in the human colon

Charles J. Steadman; Sidney F. Phillips; Michael Camilleri; Nicholas J. Talley; Anne C. Haddad; Russell B. Hanson

Human colonic muscle tone varies diurnally and postprandially in predictable ways. Increased tone reduces the capacity of the colon to store contents after a meal, whereas increased distensibility (lesser tone) during sleep enlarges the storage capabilities and may slow transit. We tested the hypothesis that antidiarrhoeal drugs would also alter tone which, in turn, might reduce diarrhoea by facilitating the storage and salvage of fluids. Using a colonic barostat to create low pressure, isobaric colonic distension in healthy volunteers, we found that intravenous atropine (0.01 mg/kg) relaxed the colon during fasting, reduced the postprandial increase in tone, and enhanced relaxation in the late (1-2 hour) postprandial period. Intravenous morphine (0.1 mg/kg) caused variable effects soon after injection but, in fasting subjects, the descending colon relaxed 70-90 minutes after morphine. These changes in colonic motility were not always obvious by conventional manometric recording. Colonic distensibility is increased by antidiarrhoeal drugs and this effect may contribute to their efficacy in slowing colonic transit and augmenting absorption.


American Journal of Physiology-gastrointestinal and Liver Physiology | 1998

Gastric mechanosensory and lower esophageal sphincter function in rumination syndrome

Miriam Thumshirn; Michael Camilleri; Russell B. Hanson; Donald E. Williams; Alfred J. Schei; Patricia P. Kammer

Our hypothesis was that rumination syndrome is associated with gastric sensory and motor dysfunction. We studied gastric and somatic sensitivity, reflex relaxation of the lower esophageal sphincter (LES), and gastric compliance and accommodation postprandially and postglucagon. A barostatically controlled gastric bag and esophageal manometry were used to compare gastric sensorimotor functions and LES relaxation to gastric distension in 12 patients with rumination syndrome and 12 controls. During bag distensions, patients had greater nausea, bloating, and aggregate score, but not pain, compared with controls ( P < 0.05). At 4 and 8 mmHg gastric distension, LES tone reduction was greater in patients than in controls ( P < 0.05). Gastric compliance, accommodation to a standard meal, and response to glucagon were not different in patients and controls; however, 6 of 12 patients had no gastric accommodation; the latter patients had significantly greater pain perception during distension ( P < 0.05) but normal somatic sensitivity compared with healthy controls. Rumination syndrome is characterized by higher gastric sensitivity and LES relaxation during gastric distension. A subgroup of patients also had absent postprandial accommodation.

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