Diagnostic yield of left‐sided colonic manometry in identifying colonic dysmotility in pediatric patients

Author:

Dorfman Lev1ORCID,El‐Chammas Khalil12,Brijawi Omar1,Fei Lin3,Mansi Sherief12ORCID,Kaul Ajay12

Affiliation:

1. Gastroenterology, Hepatology and Nutrition Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center Cincinnati Ohio USA

2. Department of Pediatrics University of Cincinnati College of Medicine Cincinnati Ohio USA

3. Biostatistics Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center Cincinnati Ohio USA

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundColonic manometry (CM) is a diagnostic procedure utilized in the evaluation of intractable constipation and involves endoscopic insertion of a manometry catheter with the tip placed in the cecum. Difficulty in advancing the colonic manometry catheter to the right colon and/or distal displacement of the catheter after appropriate placement can result in partial evaluation of the colon. Our study aimed to assess the value of limited left CM in identifying motility disorders.MethodsWe evaluated CM studies conducted at a tertiary pediatric center (2019–2022). Abnormal CM studies with catheter tips located in the cecum or ascending colon were included.Key ResultsOf 161 CM studied, 68 with abnormal CM studies met inclusion criteria (29 [42.7%] females, median age 10.3 years). Pan‐colonic dysmotility was noted in 29 (42.7%) studies and segmental dysmotility in 39 (57.4%) studies. Dysmotility of the descending and/or sigmoid colon was the most common segmental dysmotility (30, 76.9%). Isolated dysmotility of the ascending colon was noted only in patients with a cecostomy (6/13, 46.2%). The diagnostic sensitivity for dysmotility by left CM was 91.2%, which increased to 100% when excluding patients with cecostomy.Conclusions and InferencesLeft CM is a valuable and sensitive diagnostic tool for identifying abnormal colonic motility in most pediatric patients with constipation without cecostomy. Our study results provide reassurance when the manometry catheter becomes dislodged from the cecum and moves distally. Those with cecostomy have a high prevalence of dysmotility in the ascending colon and need a complete CM to identify it.

Publisher

Wiley

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