Diabetic Gastroparesis
Diabetic Gastroparesis
DIABETIC GASTROPARESIS
Gastroparesis, "delayed gastric
emptying," is one of the more serious ramifications of diabetes. We tend
to take the working of the stomach and intestines for granted, until they stop
working properly. The digestive tract is closely controlled by the brain, via
the autonomic nerves.
Problems come with the development of neuropathy.
Extended periods of time with high blood glucose, or with
the uremic toxicity that follows kidney failure, can damage
nerve fibers, and when the autonomic nerves are damaged,
stomach function can become increasingly unpredictable. As
with neuropathy itself, an individual may have mild to
severe symptoms of gastroparesis.
Gastroparesis may cause: early satiety (feeling "full"
almost immediately after starting to eat), abdominal
bloating, gastric pain, nausea, and vomiting. The
gastroparesis sufferer may burp or vomit up food consumed
many hours before--and find it nearly undigested. The
nausea, vomiting, and dehydration may become severe enough
to require hospitalization.
Anorexia, unwillingness to eat, can become a factor.
With so much frustration and difficulty digesting food, the
person simply chooses not to eat, rather than be sick all
the time. This creates further problems with blood sugar
control, and may lead to malnutrition.
Gastroparesis alone is a double handful for anyone
struggling to cope. When it follows diabetes, it can become
far more serious. The "backbone" of diabetes
self-management is good scheduling--but such scheduling
assumes that food taken on time will be digested on time.
The diabetic forever juggles food, insulin and/or oral
medications, exercise, and time-of-day, to optimize blood
glucose level. Gastroparesis' unpredictability injects a
new variable into the equation, as the digestive system may
function on time, late, or not at all.
Meals may be missed; oral medications undigested. The
correct amount of insulin, taken with a meal, may throw the
individual into hypoglycemia when the meal remains
undigested. Compensating for expected difficulties, that do
not then materialize, the diabetic may experience
hyperglycemia.
The serious consequences of severe gastroparesis are a
ringing argument for good, consistent diabetes
self-management, adopted before such ramifications have the
opportunity to develop. The Diabetes Control and
Complications Trial (DCCT) proved that "tight control" of
blood glucose radically diminished the likelihood of such
complications as neuropathy, nephropathy, retinopathy, and
gastroparesis.
Diabetes is a sneaky disease. You may do your best,
and still experience severe complications, or, you may have
developed the condition years before the DCCT, back when we
didn't know so much about good control. If you have gastric
difficulties, talk to your doctor. Gastroparesis is just
one of many conditions that can interfere with digestion.
If your doctor determines that you have gastroparesis,
a number of options are open, depending on the severity of
your symptoms. Medications such as Metoclopramide,
Bethanecol, Domperidone, Cisapride (Propulsid) and,
surprisingly, the antibiotic Erythromycin, bring some
relief. Your diet may need adjustment, toward
easy-to-digest foods.
Not enough is known about gastroparesis,
or about the neuropathy that produces it. Future studies should give us better
tools to deal with this ramification. We do know that diabetics who get their
blood sugars under good control and keep them there often see a lessening in
the severity of complications. It is never too late to improve your control.
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