Arrow-right Camera
The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Doctor K: Gastroparesis may require dietary changes

Anthony L. Komaroff Universal Uclick

DEAR DOCTOR K: A friend has a condition called gastroparesis. Could you explain what it is and how it can be treated?

DEAR READER: Gastroparesis is the term used for sluggish emptying of food from the stomach into the small intestine. Normally, your stomach moves about half of an average meal into the small intestine within two hours after you eat. Within four hours, about 90 percent of your meal is in the small intestine. If you have gastroparesis, food stays in the stomach much longer.

Common symptoms include nausea and upper abdominal pain. It may become difficult to keep a full meal down.

Gastroparesis has a number of causes, with diabetes topping the list. Diabetes can damage nerves, including the nerves that control stomach function. That nerve damage slows the emptying. Several medications such as antihistamines, tricyclic antidepressants, calcium-channel blockers and opioid painkillers can also slow stomach emptying.

One of the first things people can do to help control symptoms is to limit – or even avoid – fatty and fiber-rich foods. Fatty foods delay the emptying of the stomach in all of us. This appears to be equally true of “good fats” (polyunsaturated and monounsaturated fats) as well as “bad fats” (saturated fats and trans fats). For that reason, people with gastroparesis should focus on eating smaller amounts of fats – primarily the good fats, which our bodies need.

Foods rich in nondigestible fiber (typically fruits and vegetables) also exit the stomach more sluggishly than digestible food. That’s true for all of us. Food that is digested, by stomach acid and other substances, is broken into tiny pieces that more easily leave the stomach. In contrast, nondigestible fiber leaves the stomach only when the stomach muscles push it into the intestine.

Please understand that I’m not advocating that everyone avoid fiber-rich foods – in fact, they’re good for us. They just cause problems in people with gastroparesis.

Finally, eating frequent small meals rather than three large ones can help.