The Effect of Single I.V. Doses of Cimetidine or Ranitidine on Gastric Secretion

William O. Frank, Karl E. Peace, Martha Watson, John J. Seaman, Peter L. Szego, Alan Braverman, Bruce Mico, Brian Dickson

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

22 Scopus citations

Abstract

Intravenous Cimetidine, 300 mg or 400 mg, or ranitidine, 50 mg, was administered as a single dose to 36 volunteers in a randomized, crossover fashion. Aspirates of gastric juice were obtained after dosing, and the pH, titratable acidity, gastric fluid volume, and gastric acid output were determined from baseline through 7½ hours for each subject. Each intervention significantly increased pH and suppressed hydrogen ion concentration, gastric fluid volume, and gastric acid output. Both the magnitudes of the changes when compared with baseline and the time of the mean maximum effects were similar in all three drug regimens. The effect of all three interventions on gastric fluid volume and gastric acid output diminished sharply after 6 hours. The data indicate that the gastric secretory response to all three interventions did not differ substantially.
Original languageAmerican English
JournalClinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics
Volume40
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 1986

Keywords

  • Cimetidine
  • Dosage
  • Gastric secretion
  • Ranitidine

DC Disciplines

  • Public Health
  • Biostatistics

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