1. Osmolarity does not affect the gastric emptying rate of oral rehydration solutions.
- Author
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Brouns F, Senden J, Beckers EJ, and Saris WH
- Subjects
- Administration, Oral, Adult, Analysis of Variance, Body Weight physiology, Dietary Carbohydrates administration & dosage, Dietary Carbohydrates metabolism, Energy Metabolism physiology, Humans, Male, Osmolar Concentration, Rehydration Solutions administration & dosage, Rehydration Solutions chemistry, Time Factors, Gastric Emptying physiology, Rehydration Solutions metabolism
- Abstract
Background: The objective of this study was to determine the effect of either carbohydrate content or osmolarity on gastric emptying rate in normal healthy subjects., Methods: In total 12 test drinks were ingested as a single 8 mL/kg per body weight bolus on an empty stomach. Six of these drinks had a different carbohydrate content, increasing stepwise from 45 to 90 g/L, but all with the same osmolarity (330 mOsm/kg). The other six drinks all contained 60 g carbohydrate/L but differed stepwise in osmolarity because of the use of maltodextrins with a difference in chain length (243 to 374 mOsm/kg)., Results: The results show a significant negative relation between carbohydrate content and gastric emptying in the six drinks with a uniform osmolarity but progressively increasing carbohydrate content. The six drinks, which had the same carbohydrate-energy content but different osmolarities, emptied all at the same rate from the stomach. The delivery of carbohydrate-energy per minute from the stomach to the small intestine was the same for all drinks., Conclusions: From these data we conclude that the rate of gastric emptying of carbohydrate-containing solutions is triggered by the carbohydrate-energy drink content or by the delivery rate of carbohydrate-energy to the gut. Osmolarity in the range studied here had no effect.
- Published
- 1995
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