A gastric emptying study tells healthcare providers how well your stomach muscles are working. Your stomach muscles coordinate to move food through in a controlled and systematic way. If they’re healthy, food empties from your stomach into your intestines within a normal time range. If it doesn’t, you have rapid or delayed gastric emptying.
A gastric emptying study is a medical test that tracks how long it takes a meal (or drink) to move through your stomach and empty from it. The coordinated passage of food and liquids through your stomach is called your gastric motility. Healthcare providers test your gastric motility to find out if it’s working normally. If it’s faster or slower than normal, your stomach may have a medical condition.
The most common method for testing gastric motility is called gastric emptying scintigraphy (GES). This is what most healthcare providers mean when they suggest a gastric emptying study. Gastric emptying scintigraphy is a type of nuclear medicine imaging test. It produces images by scanning radiation in your body. To make your stomach show up in the scan, you’ll ingest a meal with a radioactive tracer in it.
Other types of gastric emptying studies include:
Advertisement
Cleveland Clinic is a non-profit academic medical center. Advertising on our site helps support our mission. We do not endorse non-Cleveland Clinic products or services. Policy
The study tells you if your stomach is emptying too fast or too slow. It can also show where in your stomach things are moving faster or slower, and which parts are involved. This can begin to explain some of the gastrointestinal (GI) symptoms you might be having. A healthcare provider might suggest a gastric emptying study if you’ve been experiencing certain symptoms after eating, such as:
Slow gastric emptying may be a sign of an obstruction in your stomach, or stomach paralysis (gastroparesis). Gastroparesis is a problem with your stomach muscles and nerves. Fast gastric emptying, or dumping syndrome, is also related to your muscles and nerves. It’s a common side effect of stomach surgery, but if you haven’t had surgery, it might point to another underlying condition.
Advertisement
The nuclear imaging test works by scanning a radioactive tracer as it moves through your stomach. Some healthcare providers describe scintigraphy as an “inside-out X-ray”. Instead of passing radiation through your body from the outside, a radioactive tracer emits gamma rays from inside you. Then, like an X-ray, a gamma camera detects the radiation and processes it into two-dimensional images.
To see how a solid meal progresses through your stomach, a healthcare provider adds the radioactive tracer to a meal that you’ll consume before the test. It’s a standardized meal, the same for everyone, with precise amounts of fiber, sugar, protein and fat, which all affect your gastric motility. The standard radioactive isotope they use is sulfur colloid (99mTc), which has a very low risk of toxicity.
You’ll discuss the test with your healthcare provider in advance. They’ll want to know what health conditions you have and what medications you’re taking, which can affect how the test works for you.
You may not be a good candidate for the test if you’re prone to hyperglycemia or hypoglycemia. You should also avoid the test if you’re pregnant or breastfeeding (chestfeeding) because of the radiation exposure.
If you have a menstrual cycle, they might want to schedule your test at a certain point in your cycle to avoid the effects of hormone fluctuations, which can affect gastric emptying and skew your results.
Advertisement
You’ll need to have an empty stomach for the test. Your healthcare provider will ask you not to eat or drink at least four hours beforehand. They’ll typically schedule your test in the morning, so you can fast overnight.
If you have diabetes and use insulin, they’ll ask you to bring it and your glucose monitor with you. They’ll check your blood glucose levels before the test, record them and adjust them with insulin, if necessary.
You shouldn’t smoke before the test, which can delay gastric emptying. You may also need to discontinue certain medications a few days before the test, including:
A gastric emptying nuclear scan takes between two and four hours. Two hours is as long as it takes for the average stomach to empty. If your stomach empties completely within that time, they’ll stop scanning at that point. But if it takes longer, they’ll continue scanning for up to four hours.
You won’t feel the scan or notice the radiation at all. The radioactive tracer is undetectable in your food.
A liquid emptying study can provide additional information about your condition. Liquids move through your stomach differently than solids, and you can have a different result from this test. Your healthcare provider may order a liquid emptying study together with your solid emptying study, or they may order it afterward as a follow-up test.
For this shorter test, you drink a cup of water tagged with sulfur colloid. A technician takes three sets of images over an hour-long session.
The small dose of radiation you’ll ingest isn’t enough to harm you. If you’re pregnant, there’s a small risk of harm to the fetus. If you’re lactating, a small amount of radiation may leak into your milk. These are reasons to postpone the test. Otherwise, there are no known side effects. The radiation will pass out of your body through your pee and poop over the next two days. Drink plenty of water to help it along.
Your healthcare provider will read your test results and discuss them with you. Your results will show how long it took for the meal you ate to travel through your stomach. They’ll show its progress at the one-hour, two-hour and four-hour marks. They’ll compare those results against the normal range. If your results are faster or slower than the normal range, it indicates fast or slow gastric emptying.
The normal range for the liquid emptying test is 20 to 25 minutes.
You might have gastroparesis if:
You might have dumping syndrome (rapid gastric emptying) if:
A note from Cleveland Clinic
A gastric emptying scintigraphy study is a simple, noninvasive and accurate method for testing your gastric motility. With no discomfort to you and only a few hours of your time, it can reveal a lot about how your stomach works. Symptoms that may have gone unexplained or failed to respond to treatment may now become clear. Your test results can help your healthcare provider make a diagnosis.
Last reviewed on 09/20/2023.
Learn more about the Health Library and our editorial process.
Advertisement
Cleveland Clinic is a non-profit academic medical center. Advertising on our site helps support our mission. We do not endorse non-Cleveland Clinic products or services. Policy