Mirtazapine for severe gastroparesis unresponsive to conventional prokinetic treatment
- PMID: 16959934
- DOI: 10.1176/appi.psy.47.5.440
Mirtazapine for severe gastroparesis unresponsive to conventional prokinetic treatment
Abstract
Gastroparesis is a condition of abnormal gastric motility characterized by delayed gastric emptying without evidence of mechanical outlet obstruction. The authors describe complete remission of recurrent postprandial discomfort, nausea, and vomiting within 1 week of starting mirtazapine in a gastroparetic patient who had failed to respond, in 7 months, to conventional prokinetics (erythromycin, metoclopramide, domperidone, perphenazine, itopride, bethanechol, and/or tegaserod) and pyloric injection of botulinum toxin. This is the first report to show that mirtazapine may be an effective alternative when gastroparesis is refractory to conventional measures.
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