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Georg Stacher

Researcher at University of Vienna

Publications -  83
Citations -  2304

Georg Stacher is an academic researcher from University of Vienna. The author has contributed to research in topics: Gastric emptying & Achalasia. The author has an hindex of 29, co-authored 83 publications receiving 2257 citations. Previous affiliations of Georg Stacher include Royal London Hospital & University Hospital of Lausanne.

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Cholecystokinin decreases appetite and activation evoked by stimuli arising from the preparation of a meal in man.

TL;DR: Reports of activation as well as objective activation measures increased after appetite stimulation and saline infusion but decreased with increasing dose of CCK, thus reminiscent of postprandial satiety and deactivation.
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Oesophageal and gastric motility disorders in patients categorised as having primary anorexia nervosa.

TL;DR: Clinical evaluation of patients with presumed primary anorexia nervosa should rule out the possibility that disordered oesophageal motor activity underlies the symptoms of disordered upper gastrointestinal motor activity, and delayed gastric emptying is a frequent feature in primary anoresis nervosa and might be returned to normal with domperidone.
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Slow gastric emptying in type I diabetes: relation to autonomic and peripheral neuropathy, blood glucose, and glycemic control.

TL;DR: Slow gastric emptying in patients with type I diabetes seems related to the degree of autonomic neuropathy but not to peripheral neuropathy, actual blood glucose, and glycemic control.
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Cholecystokinin octapeptide decreases intake of solid food in man.

TL;DR: The results support the notion that CCK is involved in the regulation of food intake, i.e., of standardized sandwiches, in young non-obese females and males after an overnight fast.
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Intravenous Cisapride Accelerates Delayed Gastric Emptying and Increases Antral Contraction Amplitude in Patients With Primary Anorexia Nervosa

TL;DR: It is concluded that intravenous cisapride accelerates gastric emptying and increases antral contraction amplitude in patients with anorexia nervosa and whether or not these effects can prove beneficial in diminishing the patients' symptoms and in helping them to gain weight can only be answered from studies involving long-term treatment with cisAPride.