| Literature DB >> 340327 |
A F Ippoliti, R A Sturdevant, J I Isenberg, M Binder, R Camacho, R Cano, C Cooney, M M Kline, R L Koretz, J H Meyer, I M Samloff, A D Schwabe, E A Strom, J E Valenzuela, R H Wintroub.
Abstract
In a randomized double blind multicenter trial, patients treated with cimetidine (800 or 1200 mg daily) or an intensive regimen of Al-Mg antacid (210 ml daily) had similar rates of duodenal ulcer healing and pain relief. After 4 weeks of treatment, the proportion of patients with ulcer healing by endoscopy were: cimetidine (1200 mg), 21 of 33 (64 percent); cimetidine (800 mg), 19 of 32 (59 percent); and antacids, 15 of 29 (52 percent). These proportions did not differ significantly. Eighty per cent of cimetidine-treated patients became asymptomatic by week 4, as did 63 percent of antacid-treated patients (P greater than 0.1). No untoward effects were observed during cimetidine treatment. Twenty-seven per cent of antacid-treated patients reported diarrhea.Entities:
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Year: 1978 PMID: 340327
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Gastroenterology ISSN: 0016-5085 Impact factor: 22.682