3.8 Proceedings Paper

Colonic Response to Physiological, Chemical, Electrical and Mechanical Stimuli; What Can Be Used to Define Normal Motility?

Journal

ENTERIC NERVOUS SYSTEM II
Volume 1383, Issue -, Pages 125-132

Publisher

SPRINGER INTERNATIONAL PUBLISHING AG
DOI: 10.1007/978-3-031-05843-1_12

Keywords

Colonic manometry; Meal; Colon motility; Laxative; Distension

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The colon plays a crucial role in bacterial fermentation, fluid and fatty acid exchange, and waste elimination. Understanding the colonic motor patterns is essential for studying various colonic disorders. However, the knowledge about normal colonic response is still limited.
The colon plays an important functional role in the bacterial fermentation of carbohydrates, transmural exchange of fluid and short-chain fatty acids, and the formation, storage and evacuation of faeces and gaseous contents. Coordinated colonic motor patterns are essential for these functions to occur. Our understanding of human colonic motor patterns has largely come through the use of various forms of colonic manometry catheters, combined with a range of stimuli, both physiological and artificial. These stimuli are used in patients with colonic disorders such as constipation, irritable bowel syndrome and faecal incontinence to understand the pathophysiology mechanisms that may cause the disorder and/or the associated symptoms. However, our understanding of a normal colonic response remains poor. This review will assess our understanding of the normal colonic response to commonly used stimuli in short duration studies (<8 hrs) and the mechanisms that control the response.

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