Extensive Definition
A barostat is a device used to maintain constant
pressure in a closed chamber. Their main principle is providing
constant pressures in a
balloon by means of a
pneumatic pump. Barostats are frequently used
in Neurogastroenterology
research, where they are used for measuring gut
wall tension
or sensory
thresholds in the gut.
A specially designed instrument is needed in
Neurogastroenterology research since the gut wall has an
outstanding capacity to expand and contract spontaneously and
by reflex. When this
occurs, a balloon placed anywhere in the gut has to be inflated or
deflated very rapidly in order to maintain a constant pressure in
this balloon.
Barostat-balloon systems have been used anywhere
in the gut, including the esophagus, stomach, small bowel,
colon,
and the rectum
ampulla.
Computer-driven
barostats have widely been used to assess sensation and pain
thresholds in the gut. Assessment of pain thresholds in the ampulla
recti has been proposed as diagnostic measure in irritable
bowel syndrome.
A typical method for measuring thresholds is the
single random staircase or tracking procedure. This is a blend of
two paradigms
widely used in psychophysical research:
ascending stimuli (prone to perception
bias) and random
stimuli. The latter is regarded unethically since pain thresholds
vary over a wide range in the gut, and therefore stimuli with
random intensity can hurt very much. In a tracking procedure,
ascending stimuli are used until the threshold is reached. Then the
tracking phase begins. If the subject rates a stimulus to be above
the threshold, the next stimulus will be chosen in a random process
to be a 'stair' higher than the last one or of the same intensity.
If, however, the subject rates the stimulus to be under the
threshold, a less intense or similar stimulus will follow.
Therefore, each stimulus is unpredictable in this phase.
See also: enteric
nervous system, gut
barostat in German: Barostat