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. 2017 Oct 27;34(12):2680–2692. doi: 10.1007/s12325-017-0632-6

Table 1.

Diabetic gastroparesis symptoms reported: spontaneous, probed, and total (n = 73)

Symptom Spontaneous reports Probed reports Total reports
Bloating 51 (69.9%) 17 (23.3%) 68 (93.2%)
Stomach fullness 43 (58.9%) 25 (34.2%) 68 (93.2%)
Upper abdominal discomfort 16 (21.9%) 50 (68.5%) 66 (90.4%)
Nausea 36 (49.3%) 26 (35.6%) 62 (84.9%)
Early satiety 30 (41.1%) 31 (42.5%) 61 (83.6%)
Stomach or belly visibly larger 35 (47.9%) 24 (32.9%) 59 (80.8%)
Upper abdominal pain 38 (52.1%) 19 (26.0%) 57 (78.1%)
Postprandial fullness 15 (20.5%) 41 (56.2%) 56 (76.7%)
Loss of appetite 22 (30.1%) 31 (42.5%) 53 (72.6%)
Vomiting 39 (53.4%) 5 (6.8%) 44 (60.3%)
Retching 7 (9.6%) 33 (45.2%) 40 (54.8%)
Constipation 39 (53.4%) NA 39 (53.4%)
Heartburn or reflux 38 (52.1%) NA 38 (52.1%)
Gas 35 (47.9%) NA 35 (47.9%)
Diarrhea 28 (38.4%) NA 28 (38.4%)
Regurgitation 22 (30.1%) 2 (2.7%) 24 (32.9%)a
Cramping 18 (24.7%) NA 18 (24.7%)
General abdominal pain/discomfort 18 (24.7%) NA 18 (24.7%)
Lower abdominal pain 12 (16.4%) NA 12 (16.4%)
Lower abdominal discomfort 7 (9.6%) NA 7 (9.6%)
Stomach rumbling 7 (9.6%) NA 7 (9.6%)
Accidents 2 (2.7%) NA 2 (2.7%)

If specific symptoms associated with gastroparesis in the literature and/or in existing patient-reported outcome measures were not mentioned spontaneously, interview participants were asked if they had experienced them: stomach fullness, being unable to finish a normal-sized meal, feeling excessively full after meals, loss of appetite, nausea, retching, vomiting, bloating, stomach visibly larger, upper abdominal pain, and upper abdominal discomfort. Italicized symptoms were systematically probed per the pretreatment visit interview guide.

NA not applicable

aAlthough not systematically probed, this symptom was endorsed twice in response to probing.