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Geoffrey S. Hebbard

Researcher at Royal Melbourne Hospital

Publications -  99
Citations -  3147

Geoffrey S. Hebbard is an academic researcher from Royal Melbourne Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Gastric emptying & High resolution manometry. The author has an hindex of 32, co-authored 93 publications receiving 2732 citations. Previous affiliations of Geoffrey S. Hebbard include Repatriation General Hospital & Royal Australasian College of Physicians.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Esophageal motility disorders on high-resolution manometry: Chicago classification version 4.0©

Rena Yadlapati, +53 more
TL;DR: The Chicago Classification v4.4.0 as discussed by the authors is the most recent version of the Chicago Classification, which uses high-resolution manometry (HRM) for motility disorders.
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High‐resolution manometry predicts the success of oesophageal bolus transport and identifies clinically important abnormalities not detected by conventional manometry

TL;DR: The accuracy with which bolus transport could be predicted from conventional manometry and high‐resolution manometry was compared to that from HRM in patients with endoscopy‐negative dysphagia in whom conventional investigations had been non‐diagnostic.
Journal Article

Gastric emptying in diabetes: an overview.

TL;DR: In both normal subjects and patients with diabetes the blood glucose response to oral carbohydrate and gastric emptying are related and there is evidence that modulation of the rate of gastric emptied, by dietary or pharmacological means, could be used to optimise glycaemic control.
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Role and integration of mechanisms controlling gastric emptying

TL;DR: The optimal approach to understanding the mechanics of gastric emptying should be to perform concurrent recordings of gastropyloroduodenal pressures, wall motion generated by muscular contractions, intragastric distribution of food, and both transpyloric and intragASTric flow on a second by second basis.
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Motor function of the proximal stomach and visceral perception in gastro-oesophageal reflux disease

TL;DR: Reflux disease is associated with delayed recovery of proximal gastric tone after a meal and increased visceral sensitivity, which may contribute to symptom reporting.