Affiliation:
1. Department of Anesthesiology, Critical Care and Perioperative Medicine Rouen University Hospital Rouen France
2. INSERM EnVI UMR Unit 1096 Rouen University Hospital Rouen France
3. Digestive Physiology Department CHU Rouen Rouen France
4. Nutrition, Brain and Gut Laboratory, INSERM Unit 1073 Rouen University Hospital Rouen France
Abstract
AbstractBackground and PurposeMeasurement of gastro‐intestinal motility is increasingly performed under general anesthesia during endoscopic or surgical procedures. The aim of the present study was to review the impact of different anesthetic agents on digestive motility measurements in humans.MethodsThis systematic review was performed using the Medline‐Pubmed and Web of Science databases. All articles published until October 2023 were screened by identification of key words. Studies were reviewed if patients had an assessment of digestive motility using conventional perfused manometry, high‐resolution manometry, electronic barostat or functional lumen impedance planimetry with the use of inhaled or intravenous anesthetic anesthetic agents (propofol, ketamine, halogens, nitrous oxide, opioids, and neuromuscular blockades).ResultsFour hundred and eighty‐eight unique citations were identified, of which 42 studies met the inclusion criteria and were included in the present review. The impact of anesthetics was mostly studied in patients who underwent esophageal manometry. There was a heterogeneity in both the dose and timing of administration of anesthetics among the studies. Remifentanil analgesia was the most studied anesthetic drug in the literature, showing a decrease in both distal latency and lower esophageal sphincter pressure after its administration, but the impact on Chicago classification was not studied. Inhaled anesthetics administration elicited a decrease in lower esophageal sphincter pressure, but contradictory findings were shown on esophageal motility following propofol or neuromuscular blocking agents administration.ConclusionStudies of the impact of anesthetics on digestive motility remain scarce in the literature, although some agents have been reported to profoundly affect gastro‐intestinal motility.