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The overall prevalence of swallowing disorders, impaired gastric emptying, constipation and fecal incontinence is high among elderly patients. The pathophysiology most likely includes a variety of factors ranging from degeneration of enteric neurons and the non-neuronal cell populations involved in GI motility up to age-dependent metabolic and neuroendocrine changes and dietary factors. Deciphering the effects of "healthy aging" but also of the numerous typical chronic diseases of the elderly on GI motility is an ongoing challenge and prerequisite for improving patients' medical care and quality of life.
Robert Patejdl (Fri,) studied this question.
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