British Journal of Anaesthesia, Vol 77, Issue 5 642-644, Copyright © 1996 by The Board of Management and Trustees of the British Journal of Anaesthesia
J. J. Hauptfleisch and K. A. Payne
We have investigated the effect on the pH of the gastric fluid of a single
dose of sodium citrate 0.3 mol litre-1 (antacid) and a solution containing
sodium citrate dehydrate (100 mg ml-1) with citric acid monohydrate (66 mg
ml-1) (buffer). The dose for both solutions was 0.4 ml kg-1 via a
nasogastric tube. Each group comprised 10 patients undergoing neurosurgical
operations of 5-7 h duration. A control group of 10 patients received no
gastric solution. The pH of the gastric aspirate was measured hourly using
a Metrohm 632 digital pH meter (Synectics Medical, Sweden). Mean baseline
gastric pH was 2.64 (SD 1.71). In the control group, pH increased to 4.4
(1.51) at 5 h, returning to baseline at 7 h. In the antacid group, pH
increased to 6.11 (0.47) at 15 min and decreased to 3.70 (1.94) at 7 h (P
< 0.01). In the buffer group, pH was stable at 3.80-3.95 (0.22) over 7 h
(P > 0.01). Total mean gastric aspirate was 0.5 ml kg-1.
CLINICAL INVESTIGATIONS
An oral sodium citrate-citric acid non-particulate buffer in humans
Anaesthesiology Department, Medical School, University of Stellenbosch, PO Box 19063, Parowvallei, South Africa
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