Thyroid diseases may be related to gastrointestinal motility symptoms. Such symptoms can vary in degree and, sometimes, are the only clue of a thyroid disease or, at least, the first. The mechanism by which the thyroid hormones can influence gastrointestinal motility, even if not still completely elucidated, can be found in a synergism between a direct effect of the thyronins and an indirect effect mediated by cathecolamines on the muscle cell receptors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEsophageal motor function was studied in 14 patients affected with diffuse and (multi)nodular nontoxic goiter, with dysphagia and neck discomfort, and in 10 age-matched controls without thyroid and/or gastroesophageal diseases. Esophageal manometry was employed to evaluate upper esophageal sphincter pressure (UESP) and lower esophageal sphincter pressure (LESP), amplitude, duration and propagation velocity of peristaltic contractions and the presence of simultaneous deglutitive pressure waves. Esophageal transit was evaluated by radioisotopical method, at different times, in proximal, middle and distal esophagus.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMinerva Dietol Gastroenterol
June 1986