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Dive into the research topics where Wim J. E. P. Lammers is active.

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Featured researches published by Wim J. E. P. Lammers.


American Journal of Physiology-gastrointestinal and Liver Physiology | 2009

Gut peristalsis is governed by a multitude of cooperating mechanisms.

Jan D. Huizinga; Wim J. E. P. Lammers

Peristaltic motor activity of the gut is an essential activity to sustain life. In each gut organ, a multitude of overlapping mechanisms has developed to acquire the ability of coordinated contractile activity under a variety of circumstances and in response to a variety of stimuli. The presence of several simultaneously operating control systems is a challenge for investigators who focus on the role of one particular control activity since it is often not possible to decipher which control systems are operating or dominant in a particular situation. A crucial advantage of multiple control systems is that gut motility control can withstand injury to one or more of its components. Our efforts to increase understanding of control mechanism are not helped by recent attempts to eliminate proven control systems such as interstitial cells of Cajal (ICC) as pacemaker cells, or intrinsic sensory neurons, nor does it help to view peristalsis as a simple reflex. This review focuses on the role of ICC as slow-wave pacemaker cells and places ICC into the context of other control mechanisms, including control systems intrinsic to smooth muscle cells. It also addresses some areas of controversy related to the origin and propagation of pacemaker activity. The urge to simplify may have its roots in the wish to see the gut as a consequence of a single perfect design experiment whereas in reality the control mechanisms of the gut are the messy result of adaptive changes over millions of years that have created complementary and overlapping control systems. All these systems together reliably perform the task of moving and mixing gut content to provide us with essential nutrients.


American Journal of Physiology-gastrointestinal and Liver Physiology | 2010

Origin and propagation of human gastric slow-wave activity defined by high-resolution mapping

Gregory O'Grady; Peng Du; Leo K. Cheng; John U. Egbuji; Wim J. E. P. Lammers; John A. Windsor; Andrew J. Pullan

Slow waves coordinate gastric motility, and abnormal slow-wave activity is thought to contribute to motility disorders. The current understanding of normal human gastric slow-wave activity is based on extrapolation from data derived from sparse electrode recordings and is therefore potentially incomplete. This study employed high-resolution (HR) mapping to reevaluate human gastric slow-wave activity. HR mapping was performed in 12 patients with normal stomachs undergoing upper abdominal surgery, using flexible printed circuit board (PCB) arrays (interelectrode distance 7.6 mm). Up to six PCBs (192 electrodes; 93 cm(2)) were used simultaneously. Slow-wave activity was characterized by spatiotemporal mapping, and regional frequencies, amplitudes, and velocities were defined and compared. Slow-wave activity in the pacemaker region (mid to upper corpus, greater curvature) was of greater amplitude (mean 0.57 mV) and higher velocity (8.0 mm/s) than the corpus (0.25 mV, 3.0 mm/s) (P < 0.001) and displayed isotropic propagation. A marked transition to higher amplitude and velocity activity occurred in the antrum (0.52 mV, 5.9 mm/s) (P < 0.001). Multiple (3-4) wavefronts were found to propagate simultaneously in the organoaxial direction. Frequencies were consistent between regions (2.83 +/- 0.35 cycles per min). HR mapping has provided a more complete understanding of normal human gastric slow-wave activity. The pacemaker region is associated with high-amplitude, high-velocity activity, and multiple wavefronts propagate simultaneously. These data provide a baseline for future HR mapping studies in disease states and will inform noninvasive diagnostic strategies.


Gastroenterology | 2012

Abnormal initiation and conduction of slow-wave activity in gastroparesis, defined by high-resolution electrical mapping.

Gregory O'Grady; Timothy R. Angeli; Peng Du; Chris Lahr; Wim J. E. P. Lammers; John A. Windsor; Thomas L. Abell; Gianrico Farrugia; Andrew J. Pullan; Leo K. Cheng

BACKGROUND & AIMS Interstitial cells of Cajal (ICC) generate slow waves. Disrupted ICC networks and gastric dysrhythmias are each associated with gastroparesis. However, there are no data on the initiation and propagation of slow waves in gastroparesis because research tools have lacked spatial resolution. We applied high-resolution electrical mapping to quantify and classify gastroparesis slow-wave abnormalities in spatiotemporal detail. METHODS Serosal high-resolution mapping was performed using flexible arrays (256 electrodes; 36 cm(2)) at stimulator implantation in 12 patients with diabetic or idiopathic gastroparesis. Data were analyzed by isochronal mapping, velocity and amplitude field mapping, and propagation animation. ICC numbers were determined from gastric biopsy specimens. RESULTS Mean ICC counts were reduced in patients with gastroparesis (2.3 vs 5.4 bodies/field; P < .001). Slow-wave abnormalities were detected by high-resolution mapping in 11 of 12 patients. Several new patterns were observed and classified as abnormal initiation (10/12; stable ectopic pacemakers or diffuse focal events; median, 3.3 cycles/min; range, 2.1-5.7 cycles/min) or abnormal conduction (7/10; reduced velocities or conduction blocks; median, 2.9 cycles/min; range, 2.1-3.6 cycles/min). Circumferential conduction emerged during aberrant initiation or incomplete block and was associated with velocity elevation (7.3 vs 2.9 mm s(-1); P = .002) and increased amplitudes beyond a low base value (415 vs 170 μV; P = .002). CONCLUSIONS High-resolution mapping revealed new categories of abnormal human slow-wave activity. Abnormalities of slow-wave initiation and conduction occur in gastroparesis, often at normal frequency, which could be missed by tests that lack spatial resolution. Irregular initiation, aberrant conduction, and low amplitude activity could contribute to the pathogenesis of gastroparesis.


Gastroenterology | 2008

Focal activities and re-entrant propagations as mechanisms of gastric tachyarrhythmias.

Wim J. E. P. Lammers; Luc Ver Donck; Betty Stephen; Dirk Smets; Jan A.J. Schuurkes

BACKGROUND & AIMS Gastric arrhythmias occur in humans and experimental animals either spontaneously or induced by drugs or diseases. However, there is no information regarding the origin or the propagation patterns of the slow waves that underlie such arrhythmias. METHODS To elucidate this, simultaneous recordings were made on the antrum and the distal corpus during tachygastrias in open abdominal anesthetized dogs using a 240 extracellular electrode assembly. After the recordings, the signals were analyzed, and the origin and path of slow wave propagations were reconstructed. RESULTS Several types of arrhythmias could be distinguished, including (1) premature slow waves (25% of the arrhythmias), (2) single aberrant slow waves (4%), (3) bursts (18%), (4) regular tachygastria (11%), and (5) irregular tachygastria (10%). During regular tachygastria, rapid, regular slow waves emerged from the distal antrum or the greater curvature, whereas, during irregular tachygastria, numerous variations occurred in the direction of propagation, conduction blocks, focal activity, and re-entry. In 12 cases, the arrhythmia was initiated in the recorded area. In each case, after a normal propagating slow wave, a local premature slow wave occurred in the antrum. These premature slow waves propagated in various directions, often describing a single or a double loop that re-entered several times, thereby initiating additional slow waves. CONCLUSIONS Gastric arrhythmias resemble those in the heart and share many common features such as focal origin, re-entry, circular propagation, conduction blocks, and fibrillation-like behavior.


American Journal of Physiology-gastrointestinal and Liver Physiology | 2009

Origin and propagation of the slow wave in the canine stomach: the outlines of a gastric conduction system

Wim J. E. P. Lammers; Luc Ver Donck; Betty Stephen; Dirk Smets; Jan A.J. Schuurkes

Slow waves are known to originate orally in the stomach and to propagate toward the antrum, but the exact location of the pacemaker and the precise pattern of propagation have not yet been studied. Using assemblies of 240 extracellular electrodes, simultaneous recordings of electrical activity were made on the fundus, corpus, and antrum in open abdominal anesthetized dogs. The signals were analyzed off-line, pathways of slow wave propagation were reconstructed, and slow wave velocities and amplitudes were measured. The gastric pacemaker is located in the upper part of the fundus, along the greater curvature. Extracellularly recorded slow waves in the pacemaker area exhibited large amplitudes (1.8 +/- 1.0 mV) and rapid velocities (1.5 +/- 0.9 cm/s), whereas propagation in the remainder of the fundus and in the corpus was slow (0.5 +/- 0.2 cm/s) with low-amplitude waveforms (0.8 +/- 0.5 mV). In the antrum, slow wave propagation was fast (1.5 +/- 0.6 cm/s) with large amplitude deflections (2.0 +/- 1.3 mV). Two areas were identified where slow waves did not propagate, the first in the oral medial fundus and the second distal in the antrum. Finally, recordings from the entire ventral surface revealed the presence of three to five simultaneously propagating slow waves. High resolution mapping of the origin and propagation of the slow wave in the canine stomach revealed areas of high amplitude and rapid velocity, areas with fractionated low amplitude and low velocity, and areas with no propagation; all these components together constitute the elements of a gastric conduction system.


Neurogastroenterology and Motility | 2010

Origin, propagation and regional characteristics of porcine gastric slow wave activity determined by high‐resolution mapping

John U. Egbuji; Gregory O’Grady; Peng Du; Leo K. Cheng; Wim J. E. P. Lammers; John A. Windsor; Andrew J. Pullan

Background  The pig is a popular model for gastric electrophysiology studies. However, its normal baseline gastric activity has not been well characterized. High‐resolution (HR) mapping has recently enabled an accurate description of human and canine gastric slow wave activity, and was employed here to define porcine gastric slow wave activity.


Experimental Physiology | 2008

Origin and propagation of individual slow waves along the intact feline small intestine

Wim J. E. P. Lammers; Betty Stephen

The pattern of propagation of slow waves in the small intestine is not clear. Specifically, it is not known whether propagation is determined by a single dominant ICC‐MP (Interstitial cells of Cajal located in the Myenteric Plexus) pacemaker unit or whether there are multiple active pacemakers. To determine this pattern of propagation, waveforms were recorded simultaneously from 240 electrodes distributed along the whole length of the intact isolated feline small intestine. After the experiments, the propagation patterns of successive individual slow waves were analysed. In the intact small intestine, there was only a single slow wave pacemaker unit active, and this was located at or 6–10 cm from the pyloric junction. From this site, slow waves propagated in the aboral direction at gradually decreasing velocities. The majority of slow waves (73%) reached the ileocaecal junction while the remaining waves were blocked. Ligation of the intestine at one to four locations led to: (a) decrease in the distal frequencies; (b) disappearance of distal propagation blocks; (c) increase in velocities; (d) emergence of multiple and unstable pacemaker sites; and (e) propagation from these sites in the aboral and oral directions. In conclusion, in the quiescent feline small intestine a single pacemaker unit dominates the organ, with occasional propagation blocks of the slow waves, thereby producing the well‐known frequency gradient.


Neurogastroenterology and Motility | 2011

High‐resolution spatial analysis of slow wave initiation and conduction in porcine gastric dysrhythmia

Gregory O’Grady; John U. Egbuji; Peng Du; Wim J. E. P. Lammers; Leo K. Cheng; John A. Windsor; Andrew J. Pullan

Background  The significance of gastric dysrhythmias remains uncertain. Progress requires a better understanding of dysrhythmic behaviors, including the slow wave patterns that accompany or promote them. The aim of this study was to use high‐resolution spatiotemporal mapping to characterize and quantify the initiation and conduction of porcine gastric dysrhythmias.


Neurogastroenterology and Motility | 2012

Rapid high-amplitude circumferential slow wave propagation during normal gastric pacemaking and dysrhythmias.

Gregory O'Grady; Peng Du; Nira Paskaranandavadivel; Timothy R. Angeli; Wim J. E. P. Lammers; Samuel J. Asirvatham; John A. Windsor; Gianrico Farrugia; Andrew J. Pullan; Leo K. Cheng

Background  Gastric slow waves propagate aborally as rings of excitation. Circumferential propagation does not normally occur, except at the pacemaker region. We hypothesized that (i) the unexplained high‐velocity, high‐amplitude activity associated with the pacemaker region is a consequence of circumferential propagation; (ii) rapid, high‐amplitude circumferential propagation emerges during gastric dysrhythmias; (iii) the driving network conductance might switch between interstitial cells of Cajal myenteric plexus (ICC‐MP) and circular interstitial cells of Cajal intramuscular (ICC‐IM) during circumferential propagation; and (iv) extracellular amplitudes and velocities are correlated.


Neurogastroenterology and Motility | 1996

High resolution electrical mapping in the gastrointestinal system: initial results.

Wim J. E. P. Lammers; Betty Stephen; K. Arafat; G. W. Manefield

High resolution electrical mapping in the gastrointestinal system entails recording from a large number of extracellular electrodes simultaneously. It allows the collection of signals from 240 individual sites which are then amplified, filtered, digitized, multiplexed and stored on tape. After recording, periods of interest can be analysed and the original sequence of activity reconstructed. This technology, originally developed to study normal rhythms and abnormal dysrhythmias in the heart, has been modified to allow recordings from the gastrointestinal tract. In this report, initial results are presented describing the origin and propagation of the slow wave in the isolated stomach and the isolated duodenum in the cat. These results show that in both organs it not uncommon to have more than one focus active during a single cycle. The conduction of slow waves from such a multiple pacemaker environment can become quite complex, and this may play a role in determining the contractile pattern in these organs.

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Betty Stephen

United Arab Emirates University

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Peng Du

University of Auckland

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John R. Slack

United Arab Emirates University

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Subramanian Dhanasekaran

United Arab Emirates University

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