GI Endoscopy · 1 min read
G-POEM (Gastric Peroral Endoscopic Myotomy) for Refractory Gastroparesis
Clinical Bottom Line
| Target Anatomy | Procedural Defect | Clinical Outcome |
|---|---|---|
| The Pyloric Sphincter | The thickened, spastic ring of muscle violently gating the exit of the stomach. | In Gastroparesis, this sphincter fails to relax, locking food inside the stomach for hours. |
| G-POEM Dissection | Endoscopically slicing completely through the pyloric muscle ring entirely from the inside. | Permanently destroys the pyloric resistance, allowing gravity to empty the paralyzed stomach. |
Bypassing the Paralyzed Stomach
Gastroparesis—frequently a severe consequence of long-term diabetic autonomic neuropathy—causes the stomach to completely lose its peristaltic churning ability. Patients suffer from intractable daily vomiting and massive weight loss. Historically, treatment relied on highly ineffective prokinetic drugs or heavy surgical bypasses.
The Submucosal Tunnel
Gastric Peroral Endoscopic Myotomy (G-POEM) leverages cutting-edge third-space endoscopy to solve the functional obstruction. Instead of surgically slicing the patient's abdomen open, the endoscopist utilizes a gastroscope to create a tiny incision in the inner mucosal lining of the stomach about 5cm before the pylorus. The endoscopist burrows the scope deep into the submucosal layer, driving the camera down an artificial "tunnel" until they literally reach the thick, white muscle bundle of the pyloric sphincter. Utilizing an electrosurgical knife, they slice completely through the thick muscle ring, permanently destroying the valve, and then simply close the tiny mucosal entrance with clips. This dramatically accelerates gastric emptying without leaving a single surgical scar.
Clinical guidelines summarized by the Gastroscholar Research Team. Last updated: 2026. This article is intended for physicians.
For your teaching file
Save this article as a PDF
Drop your email and we'll open a print-ready version you can save as a PDF — and you'll start getting our weekly GI endoscopy newsletter.