Leticia Burton’s research while affiliated with Université Notre Dame d'Haïti and other places

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Publications (36)


Solid versus liquid pulmonary micro-aspiration of reflux disease. Does it make a difference in determining the need for intervention?
  • Article

October 2024

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21 Reads

Nuclear Medicine Communications

Leticia Burton

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Susannah Gooley

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Background Pulmonary micro-aspiration (PMA) is a feared complication of gastroesophageal reflux disease (GORD). A novel scintigraphic test for GORD has been developed and validated. It can demonstrate contamination of the upper and lower airways by refluxate. Current observations have led to the hypothesis that prolongation in solid gastric emptying (SGE) is crical in pulmonary micro-aspiration. Methods Standard LGE and SGE studies and the novel reflux test were evaluated in paired studies in patients with severe GORD to measure rates of PMA after each meal. Either water labeled with 99m Technetium Phytate for the LGE or a labeled egg sandwich for the solid meal was utilized. Major symptoms were noted and the cough and reflux severity index (CSI & RSI) was obtained in all patients. Results A total of 131 patients were enrolled (59M/72F) with age range of 21–83 years (mean: 52 years). Patients were in the overweight range for BMI (mean: 26.8). Major symptoms were bloating, nausea, belching, and dyspepsia (< 20% had heartburn). SGE was abnormal in 92% (mean 766 min) and LGE abnormal in 53% (mean 82 min). PMA was shown in 35% after the SGE and in 71% after the LGE. PMA+ patients were older. A significant correlation was found between SGE and PMA ( P < 0.00) but not LGE. The only significant symptom in the PMA group was bloating. RSI was abnormal in 64% and CSI in 46%. Conclusion The majority of patients with PMA do not complain of heartburn. Bloating in patients with severe GORD should raise the possibility of gastroparesis and PMA.


362. DELAY IN SOLID GASTRIC EMPTYING IS ASSOCIATED WITH SILENT REGURGITATION EVENTS, PULMONARY MICROASPIRATION AND LARYNGOPHARYNGEAL REFLUX DISEASE

September 2024

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9 Reads

Diseases of the Esophagus

Background Pulmonary micro-aspiration (PMA) is a feared complication of severe and sometimes silent gastroesophageal reflux disease (GORD). A novel scintigraphic test that shows refluxate contamination of the pharynx, upper and lower airways has recently been developed. This test and multiple observations allowed the development of a hypothesis that prolongation in solid gastric emptying (SGE) may be a more critical than delays in liquid gastric emptying (LGE) in micro-aspiration into the airways. Methods Standard LGE and SGE studies together with the novel microaspiration test were evaluated in paired studies in patients with medially resistant symptoms GORD to measure rates of micro-aspiration after each meal. Either water labelled with 99m Technetium Phytate for the LGE or a labelled egg sandwich for the solid meal was utilised. Major symptoms were noted and the cough and reflux severity index (CSI & RSI) obtained in all patients. Results A total of 131 patients were included in this study (59M/72F). The age range was 21 to 83 years with a mean of 52 years. Patients were in the overweight range for body mass index (BMI), with a mean of 26.8. Major symptoms were of bloating, nausea, belching and dyspepsia as well as cough, throat clearing and globus. Less than 20% complained of heartburn. Results. SGE was abnormal in 92% (Mean 766 min) and LGE was abnormal in 53% (Mean 82 min). PMA was shown in 35% after the SGE and in 71% after the LGE. PMA positive patients were older. SGE and PMA were significantly correlated (p<0.00) but not LGE. The only significant symptom in the PMA group was bloating. RSI was abnormal in 64% and CSI in 46%. Conclusion The majority of patients with PMA do not complain of heartburn. Bloating in patients with severe GORD should raise the possibility of gastroparesis and PMA. Prolonged SGE may be critical in the physiology of atypical reflux and present another treatment goal with addition of pyloroplasty to anti-reflux procedure of choice.


279. NOVEL REFLUX MICROASPIRATION SCINTIGRAPHY ALLOWS EFFECTIVE PATIENT SELECTION FOR ANTIREFLUX SURGERY IN PROXIMAL REFLUX EVENTS

September 2024

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6 Reads

Diseases of the Esophagus

Background and Aims There is currently no reference standard test for the detection of the extra-esophageal manifestations of gastroesophageal reflux disease (GORD). The current suite of diagnostic tests principally assess reflux events in the oesophagus have problematic accuracy issues in the pharynx. A new scintigraphic technique has been developed and validated against 24-hour oesophageal monitoring with pH, impedance. It allows direct visualization of refluxate in the laryngopharynx and lungs. This was utilised to evaluate patients having laparoscopic fundoplication for severe proximal reflux resistant to maximal medical therapy. Scanning may allow succesful patient selection for antireflux surgery. Methodology Following Institutional Ethics approval, 50 patients were assessed by scintigraphy before and after laparoscopic fundoplication (LF) at a single nuclear medicine facility. Standardised Reflux Symptom Indices (RSI) were obtained from each patient before and after surgery. Patients were scanned after oral 99m technetium Fyton administration with early dynamic images and delayed SPECT/CT images of the head, neck and lungs. Background corrected time-activity curves were generated for the pharynx and upper oesophagus from which frequency of reflux was estimated by counting events with activities greater than 2 standard deviations above fitted values. Frequencies, Spearman correlation and the student’s t test were utilised for analysis. Results The study population (35F, 15M) had a mean age of 63.9 years (Range 21-86). All patients underwent LF. Mean BMI was 26.8 with 67% being over-weight or obese. All patients had proximal reflux events in the early dynamic study. SPECT/ CT showed LPR events in 45/50 and pulmonary micro-aspiration (PMA) in 45/50 pre-operatively and in 36/50 and 20/50 post-operatively. The RSI, cough and throat clearing indices showed a significant fall post-operatively (p< 0.001). The frequency of scintigraphic pharyngeal reflux events was reduced from a mean of 4.5 in 30 minutes to 2.9 (t=9.1, p=0.004). Conclusion The novel scintigraphic test detects oesophageal and extra-oesophageal reflux events and permits direct visualization of refluxate in the head and neck structures and lungs. Scintigraphy correlates well with symptoms of reflux in the oesophagus and extra-esophageal structures such as the laryngopharynx (chronic cough and throat clearing) and the response to LF albeit partial. PMA was significantly reduced.


Supine dynamic study. A sample of frames from the supine dynamic study demonstrating full esophageal column gastroesophageal reflux.
SPECT/CT samples of various extra‐esophageal manifestations of GERD. There is laryngopharyngeal, maxillary sinus, eustachian tube/middle ear, and nasolacrimal system contamination by refluxate. These changes are readily apparent in the SPECT/CT images and correlate well with symptoms.
SPECT/CT illustration of the response to laparoscopic fundoplication with a significant decrease in the volume of gastroesophageal reflux showing significant reduction in the degree of contamination of both the laryngopharynx and the maxillary sinuses. There is a consequent response in the degree of soft‐tissue disease in the maxillary sinuses.
SPECT/CT imaging of the lungs demonstrating the reversal of PMA into the left lower lobe bronchus following laparoscopic fundoplication. Note contamination of the blood pool in the heart from tracer breakdown.
The graphic shows the supine time activity curve for the larynx/laryngopharynx in the upper panel with the pink line demonstrating a point‐by‐point graph at two standard deviations above the time activity curve, allowing an estimation of the frequency of reflux events in the larynx/laryngopharynx. The lower panel shows a progressive decline in oxygen saturation obtained simultaneously with the supine acquisition. The decline in oxygen saturation is maximal after approximately 20 min of supine monitoring.
Scintigraphic Imaging of Extra‐Esophageal Manifestation of Gastresophageal Reflux Disease
  • Article
  • Publisher preview available

August 2024

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23 Reads

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2 Citations

Objectives There is currently no reference standard test for the detection of the extra‐esophageal manifestations of gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD). The current suite of diagnostic tests principally assesses reflux events in the esophagus. A new scintigraphic technique has been developed and validated against reference standards. It allows direct visualization of refluxate in the laryngopharynx and lungs. Methods Fifty patients were assessed by scintigraphy before and after fundoplication at a single nuclear medicine facility. Standardized reflux symptom indices (RSIs) were obtained from each patient before and after surgery. Patients were scanned after oral 99 m technetium Fyton administration with early dynamic images and delayed SPECT/CT images of the head, neck, and lungs. ANOVA, Spearman correlation, and the Student's t‐test were utilized for analysis. Results The study population (35F, 15 M) had a mean age of 63.9 years. Mean BMI was 26.8 with 67% being overweight or obese. All patients had significant reflux. SPECT/CT showed LPR events in 45/50 and pulmonary micro‐aspiration (PMA) in 45/50 preoperatively and in 36/50 and 20/50 postoperatively, respectively. The RSI, cough, and throat clearing indices showed a significant fall postoperatively (p < 0.001). Frequency of scintigraphic reflux events was reduced from a mean of 4.5 in 30 min to 2.9 (t = 9.1, p = 0.004). Conclusion The novel scintigraphic test detects esophageal and extra‐esophageal reflux events and permits direct visualization of refluxate in the head and neck structures and lungs. It correlates well with symptoms of reflux in the esophagus and extra‐esophageal structures and the response to therapy. Level of Evidence Although prospective, the study did not randomize patients and in effect each patient became their own control following an intervention (fundoplication). Thus, the study is Level 3 evidence Laryngoscope, 135:73–79, 2025

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OGBN P06 Co-location of pulmonary abnormalities on high resolution CT imaging and pulmonary microaspiration reflux scan: Suggests a causative relationship

November 2023

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13 Reads

BJS (British Journal of Surgery)

Background The relationship between micro-aspiration of refluxate as a form of gastro-oesophageal reflux disease (GORD) and pulmonary diseases including bronchiectasis and lung fibrosis has been circumstantially suggested but not proven. Clarification of the role of GORD and microaspiration in pulmonary disease may enable targeted therapies. This study aims to determine whether there is a relationship between anatomical location of aspiration of radiological tracer on scintigraphic imaging and changes associated with pulmonary disease on high resolution computed tomographic imaging of the lung (HRCT-L). Methods Data were obtained from a prospectively populated database of patients with treatment resistant typical and atypical GORD and suspected reflux pulmonary microaspiration. Patients who underwent microaspiration studies and had concurrent HRCT-L for chest symptoms were included. Modified novel digital technique of reflux pulmonary microaspiration scintigraphy using a previously validated technique was performed to evaluate the possibility of significant GORD or extra-oesophageal symptoms, including typical symptoms such as heartburn and reflux and atypical symptoms such as throat symptoms, cough, globus, mucous, throat clearing, dysphonia and recurrent respiratory infections. HRCT-L was obtained in clinically indicated patients and compared with scintigraphic findings. Results Pulmonary reflux microaspiration scanning was performed in 121 patients (75% female, 25% male). The mean age was 67 years (range: 31 – 91 years). All patients demonstrated reflux microaspiration on scintigraphy in the supine delayed phase and all had intermittent or continuous full column gastro-oesophageal reflux. Lung parenchymal changes were apparent in 66 of 73 patients who underwent HRCT-L. Fibrotic changes were demonstrated in 51% of patients and bronchiectactic changes in 46%. Correlation at anatomical lobar levels with areas of aspiration of isotope on scintigraphic imaging was seen in 97% of fibrosis patients and 85% of bronchiectasis patients. Conclusions Modified reflux pulmonary microaspiration scintigraphy demonstrated the presence of pulmonary aspiration on delayed imaging. This is the first imaging technique with the ability to confirm the presence of lung aspiration of gastric content. Given the large proportion of cases showing lobar co-location of pulmonary abnormality on HRCT-L, this study indicates a strong relationship between aspiration of refluxate and parenchymal lung changes associated with pulmonary diseases such as IPF and bronchiectasis. There may be a significant role for modified technique scintigraphy to accurately diagnose the presence of reflux aspiration, allowing further research into pathogenesis and management of pulmonary disease.



Citations (15)


... In this study, the patient population consisted of a subgroup of patients with GERD at the esophageal impedance-pH monitoring and suspected LPRD according to the reflux symptom index (RSI). 1 In clinical practice, many patients with LPRD at the HEMII-pH have no GERD findings or abnormal proximal acid exposure. [3][4][5] The conclusion of the study can be consequently limited to a subtype of suspected LPRD patients according to the lack of LPRD diagnosis confirmation. ...

Reference:

In Reference to Scintigraphic Imaging of Extra‐Esophageal Manifestation of Gastroesophageal Reflux Disease
Scintigraphic Imaging of Extra‐Esophageal Manifestation of Gastresophageal Reflux Disease

... The collective concern and engagement in the study of pertussis has expanded experts' understanding of the disease as they make increasing discoveries of its connection with other symptoms and ailments that otherwise remained unsuspected. Applying multiple methods and diagnostic tools on cohorts of patients, Burton et al., (2022) established a possible connection between pertussis and Gastrooesophageal reflux disease/ (GORD) and laryngopharyngeal reflux (LPR). Laying out the basis of their findings, Burton and colleagues acknowledge that although there is a general belief on the difference between pertussis and GORD, the results of their observational study conducted on a large number of patients, oppose that general belief. ...

A putative link between pertussis and new onset of gastroesophageal reflux. An observational study.

Multidisciplinary Respiratory Medicine

... Our group has assessed continuous percutaneous pulse oximetry (SpO 2 ) during the supine dynamic study in patients with and without PMA by SPECT/CT imaging. 32 The study involved 265 patients (117 with micro-aspiration, 17% with hiatus hernias). Refluxate aspirating patients showed a significant decline in oxygen saturation that was maximal at 20 min into a 30-min dynamic acquisition while supine ( p = 0.008) (Fig. 5). ...

Acute oxygen desaturation characterizes pulmonary aspiration in patients with gastroesophageal reflux disease and laryngopharyngeal reflux

... This residual alcohol is known as "mouth alcohol" in breath alcohol testing and can falsely elevate the results of the test. A more insidious form of mouth alcohol contamination may come from alcohol erupting from a person's stomach into the mouth from the reflux of stomach contents from a burp, belch, vomit, hiccup, or the microaspiration of stomach contents into the airways [4,[21][22][23][24]. The danger of contents from the stomach erupting into a person's mouth is that this type of contamination may go unnoticed by the person administering the breath alcohol test. ...

Modified Reflux Scintigraphy Detects Pulmonary Microaspiration in Severe Gastro-Esophageal and Laryngopharyngeal Reflux Disease

Lung

... While the metrics used in discussing and reporting reflux in the distal esophagus largely focus on either the DeMeester score, which reports composite features of acid reflux exposure, 75 or acid exposure time, there is not a well-defined consensus on a threshold of abnormal reflux exposure in the laryngopharynx. [76][77][78] In addition, complicating these analyses is that different methods may show discordance. 79 Earlier studies, particularly among pediatric populations, were generally supportive of a link between reflux and airway stenosis. ...

A new diagnostic paradigm for laryngopharyngeal reflux disease: correlation of impedance-pH monitoring and digital reflux scintigraphy results

European Archives of Oto-Rhino-Laryngology

... A novel scintigraphic assessment of GERD and its extra-esophageal manifestations has been developed and validated against the current standard of 24-h esophageal pH/impedance and evaluated with manometry [14][15][16][17] and in normal volunteers. 18 We hypothesized that the scintigraphic test could directly demonstrate both LPR and PMA and a significant difference in scan appearance/ correlation with symptomatology when performed immediately before and following successful definitive laparoscopic fundoplication in patients with disease resistant to maximal medical therapy. ...

Findings from a novel scintigraphic gastroesophageal reflux study in asymptomatic volunteers
  • Citing Article
  • December 2020

American Journal of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging

... A variety of technical aspects of the technique used in this study can account for reduced sensitivity, especially when compared to modern reflux scintigraphy [1]. Firstly, a single dose of tracer at 40-60 MBq 99mTc DTPA in only 50 mL of fluid is an inadequate volume with which to visualize GERD. ...

A transformational change in scintigraphic gastroesophageal reflux studies: A comparison with historic techniques
  • Citing Article
  • November 2020

Clinical Physiology and Functional Imaging

... 2 Pneumonia caused by opportunistic fungal pathogens typically affects patients with acquired or congenital immunological deficiencies. 3 The common fungus Aspergillus can be found in soil, organic waste, and the air. 4 Nonetheless, immunocompetent persons rarely experience the illness. ...

Fungal Pneumonia in The Immunocompetent Host: A Possible Statistical Connection Between Allergic Fungal Sinusitis with Polyposis and Recurrent Pulmonary Infection Detected by Gastroesophageal Reflux Disease Scintigraphy

Molecular Imaging and Radionuclide Therapy

... Prolongation in liquid gastric emptying is a controversial issue as a predisposing factor to GERD 33 but has been consistently shown to be of no relevance in recent studies. 16,34 The most critical predisposition to airways reflux has been shown to be disruptions to the lower esophageal sphincter function by large hiatus hernias, 35 changes in the pressure gradient between the abdomen and thoracic cavity 36 and ineffective esophageal clearance of refluxate. 34 Esophageal clearance of reflux events has been shown to be an important aspect of airways reflux in this study. ...

Predictors of reflux aspiration and laryngo-pharyngeal reflux
  • Citing Article
  • February 2020

Esophagus

... Decreased severity of hoarseness, throat clearing, and cough after eating or lying represented less laryngopharyngeal reflux with or without reflex symptoms triggered by the vagal reaction. 22 Our study consistent with previous research in observed improvement of DCI, indicating the recovery of the contractile function of the esophageal body helps in acid clearance and bolus transit. 23,24 Ribolsi et al 25 indicated that impaired esophageal peristalsis may account for delayed bolus transit and reduced esophageal reflux clearance in patients with GERD, and large peristaltic breaks are often identified in GERD-related chronic cough. ...

Esophageal Clearance in Laryngopharyngeal Reflux Disease: Correlation of Reflux Scintigraphy and 24-hour Impedance/pH in a Cohort of Refractory Symptomatic Patients

Molecular Imaging and Radionuclide Therapy