Effect of menstrual cycle and menopause on human gastric electrophysiology

Alexandria H. Lim, Chris Varghese, Gabrielle H. Sebaratnam, Gabriel Schamberg, Stefan Calder, Armen A. Gharibans, Christopher N. Andrews, Daphne Foong, Vincent Ho, Shunichi Ishida, Yohsuke Imai, Michelle R. Wise, Greg O’Grady

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

2 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Chronic gastroduodenal symptoms disproportionately affect females of childbearing age; however, the effect of menstrual cycling on gastric electrophysiology is poorly defined. To establish the effect of the menstrual cycle on gastric electrophysiology, healthy subjects underwent noninvasive Body Surface Gastric Mapping (BSGM; 8x8 array) with the validated symptom logging App (Gastric Alimetry, New Zealand). Participants included were premenopausal females in follicular (n ¼ 26) and luteal phases (n ¼ 18) and postmenopausal females (n ¼ 30) and males (n ¼ 51) were controls. Principal gastric frequency (PGF), body mass index (BMI) adjusted amplitude, Gastric Alimetry Rhythm Index (GA-RI), Fed:Fasted Amplitude Ratio (ff-AR), meal response curves, and symptom burden were analyzed. Menstrual cycle-related electrophysiological changes were then transferred to an established anatomically accurate computational gastric fluid dynamics model (meal viscosity 0.1 Pas) to predict the impact on gastric mixing and emptying. PGF was significantly higher in the luteal versus follicular phase [mean 3.21 cpm, SD (0.17) vs. 2.94 cpm, SD (0.17), P < 0.001] and versus males [3.01 cpm, SD (0.2), P < 0.001]. In the computational model, this translated to 8.1% higher gastric mixing strength and 5.3% faster gastric emptying for luteal versus follicular phases. Postmenopausal females also exhibited higher PGF than females in the follicular phase [3.10 cpm, SD (0.24) vs. 2.94 cpm, SD (0.17), P ¼ 0.01], and higher BMI-adjusted amplitude [40.7 lV (33.02–52.58) vs. 29.6 lV (26.15–39.65), P < 0.001], GA-RI [0.60 (0.48–0.73) vs. 0.43 (0.30–0.60), P ¼ 0.005], and ff-AR [2.51 (1.79–3.47) vs. 1.48 (1.21–2.17), P ¼ 0.001] than males. There were no differences in symptoms. These results define variations in gastric electrophysiology with regard to human menstrual cycling and menopause. NEW & NOTEWORTHY This study evaluates gastric electrophysiology in relation to the menstrual cycle using a novel noninvasive high-resolution methodology, revealing substantial variations in gastric activity with menstrual cycling and menopause. Gastric slow-wave frequency is significantly higher in the luteal versus follicular menstrual phase. Computational modeling predicts that this difference translates to higher rates of gastric mixing and liquid emptying in the luteal phase, which is consistent with previous experimental data evaluating menstrual cycling effects on gastric emptying.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)G47-G56
Number of pages10
JournalAmerican Journal of Physiology: Gastrointestinal and Liver Physiology
Volume327
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jul 2024

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