Abstract

Eleven patients with Crohn's disease in remission who were receiving total parenteral nutrition (TPN) underwent continuous intragastric 24-h pH monitoring before and during ranitidine administration. The patients were randomly allocated to receive 200 mg/day (group 1) or 400 mg/day (group 2) of ranitidine by continuous infusion. The mean basal 24-h gastric pH was sustained at a low value. After raintidine administration, the mean pH increased significantly both in group 1 (from 2.13 to 3.28) and in group 2 (from 1.91 to 3.36), with the mean holding-time at pH-3 also increasing significantly in both groups. There were no differences in the mean pH or holding-time at pH-3 between the two groups during ranitidine administration; however, the plasma ranitidine concentration was significantly higher in group 2. These findings indicate that the continuous infusion of a standard dose of ranitidine exerted a maximal inhibitory effect on the sustained hyperacidity induced by TPN, but that this infusion was unable to maintain the intragastric pH level at above 3.5.

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