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. 1969 Oct;10(10):787-95.
doi: 10.1136/gut.10.10.787.

Use of an inert marker (phenol red) to improve accuracy in gastric secretion studies

Use of an inert marker (phenol red) to improve accuracy in gastric secretion studies

M Hobsley et al. Gut. 1969 Oct.

Abstract

Gastric secretion from 24 subjects was collected by continuous nasogastric aspiration during the plateau of secretion evoked by intravenous histamine diphosphate, 0.01 mg/kg/hr. Simultaneously, phenol red was instilled at a constant rate into the proximal part of the stomach. Concentrations of phenol red in 15-minute aspirates were measured, and used to deduce pyloric losses and the reasons for random variation in the volumes aspirated. The average coefficient of variation in the volume was 26%, irrespective of the nature of the nasogastric tube. Correction by phenol red reduced this value to 21%. The coefficient of variation of volume diminished as secretion rate increased. Pyloric losses amounted to 7 ml/15 min, and were independent of the secretion rate. The quantitative effect of these errors upon the assessment of gastric secretion was minimal at high secretion rates but important at low rates.

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