Lessons from prolonged gastric pH monitoring
- PMID: 2979700
- DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2036.1987.tb00661.x
Lessons from prolonged gastric pH monitoring
Erratum in
- Aliment Pharmacol Ther 1988 Apr;2(2):185
Abstract
Intragastric pH monitoring has shown that the distribution of acidity within the stomach is not homogeneous. Not only is it affected by meals but it also has a circadian rhythm in which nocturnal pH falls to very acid levels in normal subjects. Although results of pH monitoring are highly reproducible within individuals, considerable inter-individual variation has been shown. Duodenal ulcer patients do not appear to possess the normal buffering reaction to meals, but their night-time acidity is within the normal range. In these patients, antacids and pirenzepine have a small acid-neutralizing effect in the stomach; cimetidine is less potent than ranitidine and famotidine. Clinicians can choose between a single dose of either ranitidine or famotidine in the evening with dinner and a twice-daily regimen.
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