Abstract

Clinical trials conducted in the latter part of the past millennium suggested that bleeding from gastric stress ulceration was an important cause of morbidity and mortality in intensive care unit (ICU) patients and that treatment with acid-suppressive therapy reduced the risk of clinically significant bleeding. Stress ulcer prophylaxis therefore became regarded as the standard of care in all ICU patients. However, more recent clinical trials have demonstrated that the risk of clinically significant bleeding is extremely low (about 1%) and not altered by the use of acid-suppressive therapy. Furthermore, a critical review of the “historical” clinical trials, as well as the data from experimental and more recent clinical trials, suggests that enteral feeding (gastric) is at least as effective as acid-suppressive therapy in the prevention of gastric stress ulceration and is the prophylactic measure of choice in most ICU patients.

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