Literature DB >> 8578184

The pH/PCO2 method for continuous determination of human gastric acid and bicarbonate secretion. A validation study.

J Dalenbäck1, L Fändriks, L Olbe, H Sjövall.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The present paper describes and evaluates a methodologic approach for registration of the fast, interdigestive, motility-related changes in gastric acid and bicarbonate outputs seen in man.
METHODS: The technique is based on continuous gastric luminal perfusion and measurements of pH and PCO2 in gastric effluent and concomitant intragastric/duodenal manometry. Fourteen healthy volunteers participated.
RESULTS: Direct acid secretory estimations from pH recordings, corrected for hydrogen ion activity, correlated closely with values obtained by conventional titration. After intragastric infusion of bicarbonate, 96 +/- 5% of the newly measured steady-state value was registered virtually instantaneously provided that corrections for the PCO2 electrode time constant and the perfusion/aspiration time were made. In the neutral pH range (pH 5-7), practically full quantitative recovery of intragastrically infused bicarbonate was obtained. In the acid pH interval (pH 2-5) the recovery was significantly lower (53 +/- 6%; p < 0.01). With an aspirate without air admixture and during high perfusion rates (31 and 46 ml/min), full recovery of bicarbonate was obtained also at an acid pH, whereas a reduced perfusion rate (16 ml/min) significantly (p < 0.05) reduced the recovery rate.
CONCLUSIONS: With the pH/PCO2 technique both acid and bicarbonate assessments have a close to on-line time resolution. Acid output is measured accurately, but the method potentially underestimates actual bicarbonate levels in the acid pH range, a combined effect of diffusion of CO2 into air bubbles in the aspirate and into the gastric mucosa from the lumen. A high gastric perfusion rate minimizes this source of error. The pH/PCO2 technique is well suited for studies of the interaction between secretion and motility in the human stomach.

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Year:  1995        PMID: 8578184     DOI: 10.3109/00365529509101592

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Scand J Gastroenterol        ISSN: 0036-5521            Impact factor:   2.423


  1 in total

1.  Epithelial carbonic anhydrases facilitate PCO2 and pH regulation in rat duodenal mucosa.

Authors:  Misa Mizumori; Justin Meyerowitz; Tetsu Takeuchi; Shu Lim; Paul Lee; Claudiu T Supuran; Paul H Guth; Eli Engel; Jonathan D Kaunitz; Yasutada Akiba
Journal:  J Physiol       Date:  2006-03-23       Impact factor: 5.182

  1 in total

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