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Clinical Trial
. 1989 Sep;71(3):327-30.
doi: 10.1097/00000542-198909000-00001.

Effect of oral liquids and ranitidine on gastric fluid volume and pH in children undergoing outpatient surgery

Affiliations
Clinical Trial

Effect of oral liquids and ranitidine on gastric fluid volume and pH in children undergoing outpatient surgery

B K Sandhar et al. Anesthesiology. 1989 Sep.

Abstract

Eighty-eight children (mean age 5.6 yr, range 1-14 yr) about to undergo elective outpatient surgery were randomly assigned to four groups. All children were given phenolsulfonphthalein (PSP) orally 2-3 h before the scheduled time of surgery as a marker dye to assess gastric emptying. Immediately after receiving PSP they were given: group A--liquids, up to 5 ml/kg + placebo (glucose water 0.2 ml/kg); group B--liquids, up to 5 ml/kg + ranitidine 2 mg/kg in glucose water 0.2 ml/kg; group C--placebo only; group D--ranitidine only. Gastric contents were aspirated after induction of anesthesia. Mean volume (range) in ml/kg of aspirated gastric fluid in each group was: group A--0.34 (0-1.0); group B--0.17 (0.07); group C--0.25 (0-1.1); group D--0.16 (0-0.6). The pH mean (range) value was: group A--1.83 (0.9-3.6); group B--4.76 (2.0-7.7); group C--2.10 (1.2-4.1); group D--3.97 (1.3-7.3). PSP could not be detected in the gastric samples from children in whom the ingestion-sampling interval was more than 2.25 h. In comparison with prolonged starvation, administration of oral liquids without ranitidine 2-3 h preoperatively did not produce a significant increase in mean volume of gastric aspirate, and there was no increase in the number of patients with gastric aspirate greater than 0.4 ml/kg. Administration of ranitidine with or without fluids resulted in a decrease in both volume and acidity of gastric contents.

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Comment in

  • Preoperative fasting of children.
    Meakin G. Meakin G. Anesthesiology. 1990 Mar;72(3):579-80. doi: 10.1097/00000542-199003000-00039. Anesthesiology. 1990. PMID: 2310045 No abstract available.

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