Articles: antacids.
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Critical care medicine · Aug 1985
Does antacid prophylaxis prevent upper gastrointestinal bleeding in critically ill patients?
Sixty-five surgical ICU patients at high risk of developing acute erosive gastritis and bleeding received prophylactic antacid treatment to maintain a gastric pH of at least 5.0. A similar control group of 61 patients received no specific prophylaxis. All patients in both groups developed microscopic bleeding; however, microscopic bleeding did not influence outcome. ⋯ A single patient in the control group developed severe GI bleeding due to acute erosive gastritis. Antacid prophylaxis did not prevent macroscopic bleeding and there was no correlation between the number of risk factors in individual patients and the rate of upper GI bleeding. We conclude that antacid is not required to prevent upper GI bleeding in high-risk critically ill patients.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
The effect of magnesium trisilicate mixture, metoclopramide and ranitidine on gastric pH, volume and serum gastrin.
Eighty women (40 for elective Caesarean section and 40 for elective gynaecological surgery) were randomly assigned to one of five treatment groups and received pre-operatively either no medication; magnesium trisilicate mixture (BP) 30 ml; metoclopramide 10 mg intramuscularly; ranitidine 150 mg orally on the night prior to, and the morning of, surgery; or metoclopramide 10 mg intramuscularly in combination with oral ranitidine 150 mg (the latter again given on the night prior, and the morning, of surgery). The effect of these medications on intragastric pH, volume and serum gastrin-17 was measured. No patient receiving ranitidine had a pH of less than 4. ⋯ The largest intragastric volumes were seen in the patients who had received magnesium trisilicate mixture, whilst the patients who had received metoclopramide in combination with ranitidine had the smallest intragastric volumes. Magnesium trisilicate mixture and metoclopramide resulted in no change in serum gastrin levels. However, in the subjects who had received ranitidine on the night prior to surgery, the fasting serum gastrin was significantly higher (p less than 0.01) than the values in the remaining subjects, the mean (SEM) values being 60.3 (6.3) pg/ml in those not receiving ranitidine and 111.3 (19.5) pg/ml in those who had been given ranitidine.
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Ranitidine 150 mg was given to 126 patients requiring elective Caesarean section under general anaesthesia: 43 women had ranitidine alone, 43 had this supplemented by a pre-induction dose of sodium citrate and 40 patients had ranitidine plus sodium bicarbonate. All three sub-groups provided satisfactory gastric pH and volume. ⋯ In the citrate sub-group there was one patient with a gastric pH less than 2.5 (mean pH 6.2, SEM 0.13 range 2.1-8.4). In the bicarbonate sub-group the lowest gastric acidity was 3.8 (mean pH 8.3, SEM 0.11 range 3.8-9.83).
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Oral rehydration therapy: efficacy of sodium citrate equals to sodium bicarbonate for correction of acidosis in diarrhoea.
Forty patients with moderate degrees of dehydration and acidosis because of acute watery diarrhoea were successfully treated randomly with either WHO recommended oral rehydration solution containing 2.5 g sodium bicarbonate or an oral solution containing 2.94 g sodium citrate in place of sodium bicarbonate per litre of oral rehydration rehydration solution. Efficacies were compared by measuring oral fluid intake, stool and vomitus output, change in body weight, hydration status, and rate of correction of acidosis during a period of 48 hours. ⋯ The solution with sodium citrate base was as effective as WHO-oral rehydration solution for management of diarrhoea. This study shows the efficacy, safety, and acceptability of citrate containing oral rehydration solution for rehydration and correction of acidosis in diarrhoea.
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In a retrospective analysis massive upper gastrointestinal (GI) hemorrhage, defined as blood loss requiring more than two units of blood transfusion over a 24-hour period, occurred in 40 (9.5 percent) of 420 intubated, mechanically ventilated patients with respiratory failure, irrespective of the etiology of the respiratory failure. In a prospective study hourly antacid gastric neutralization, maintaining the gastric pH over 5, the incidence of massive gastric bleeding was reduced to 3 (1.4 percent) of 210 patients. ⋯ We recommend the use of either in all intubated patients with respiratory failure. In addition, in 17 patients who had gastric bleeding at the time of transfer to the respiratory intensive care unit, gastric neutralization with hourly antacids in 14 patients and with cimetidine in three patients stopped the bleeding in all 17 patients within 24 to 48 hours.