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Clinical Trial
. 1986 Jan;90(1):68-73.
doi: 10.1016/0016-5085(86)90076-4.

Effect of lidamidine hydrochloride and loperamide on gastric emptying and transit of the small intestine. A double-blind study

Clinical Trial

Effect of lidamidine hydrochloride and loperamide on gastric emptying and transit of the small intestine. A double-blind study

C A Sninsky et al. Gastroenterology. 1986 Jan.

Abstract

We performed a double-blind randomized study in 24 healthy volunteers, to evaluate the effects of two doses of lidamidine hydrochloride, loperamide, and placebo on transit of the small intestine and gastric emptying. Transit time of the small intestine was determined by measuring the rise in breath hydrogen excretion after ingestion of lactulose. Although there was a trend for prolonged intestinal transit time in both lidamidine groups, this difference was not significant compared with that in the placebo group. Loperamide significantly slowed transit when compared with placebo or lidamidine (p less than 0.001). Gastric emptying was assessed by using a solid-phase radiolabeled meal. Three parameters of gastric emptying were analyzed: half-emptying time, area under the gastric emptying curve, and beta. Although there was a trend for a longer half-emptying time in the group that received 12 mg of lidamidine, this difference approached, but did not reach, statistical significance (p = 0.06) compared with placebo. The area under the gastric emptying curve, a potentially more sensitive parameter for measuring gastric emptying, was significantly increased in the group receiving 12 and 18 mg of lidamidine (p less than 0.05) compared with the group receiving loperamide or placebo. In summary, lidamidine significantly delayed gastric emptying but had no significant effect on small bowel transit. These data suggest that the antidiarrheal properties of lidamidine are the result of enhanced absorption or inhibition of secretion of fluid and electrolytes.

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