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Intragastric nitrites, nitrosamines, and bacterial overgrowth during cimetidine treatment.
- Source :
-
Gut [Gut] 1982 Dec; Vol. 23 (12), pp. 1048-54. - Publication Year :
- 1982
-
Abstract
- A six week course of cimetidine (1 g/day) healed peptic ulcers in 20 of 23 patients (14 with duodenal ulcer, nine with gastric ulcer). Reduction of basal acid output by 73% and peak acid output by 36% led to a rise in concentrations of intragastric aerobic bacteria and nitrate-reducing bacteria. While the mean intragastric concentration of nitrate was unchanged by treatment, there were statistically significant rises in nitrite and N-nitrosamine concentrations. The conversion from nitrates to nitrites was closely related to the occurrence of nitrate-reducing bacteria. In three patients the intragastric milieu had returned to normal two months after cimetidine treatment had been discontinued. Mean nitrite and N-nitrosamine concentrations did not return to pre-treatment levels in the group of eight patients who remained on maintenance cimetidine (0.4 g at night-time) for three months after the full dose treatment. This study shows that cimetidine treatment can create an intragastric milieu resembling that of atrophic gastritis. Large scale and long-term studies are necessary to establish whether these findings have any clinical significance.
- Subjects :
- Adult
Bacteria isolation & purification
Female
Gastric Acid metabolism
Humans
Hydrogen-Ion Concentration
Male
Middle Aged
Nitrates analysis
Peptic Ulcer drug therapy
Peptic Ulcer metabolism
Stomach analysis
Cimetidine therapeutic use
Guanidines therapeutic use
Nitrites analysis
Nitrosamines analysis
Peptic Ulcer microbiology
Stomach microbiology
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 0017-5749
- Volume :
- 23
- Issue :
- 12
- Database :
- MEDLINE
- Journal :
- Gut
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 7173716
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1136/gut.23.12.1048