gastrins has been researched along with sufotidine* in 5 studies
4 trial(s) available for gastrins and sufotidine
Article | Year |
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Sufotidine 600 mg bd virtually eliminates 24 hour intragastric acidity in duodenal ulcer subjects.
In a double blind study, 24 hour intragastric acidity and 24 hour plasma gastrin concentrations were measured simultaneously in seven duodenal ulcer subjects on the fifth day of receiving either sufotidine 600 mg bd or placebo. Compared with placebo, during treatment with sufotidine 600 mg bd the median integrated 24 hour intragastric acidity was decreased by 95% (range 74% to 99%) from 1000 to 51 mmol/h/l, whilst the median integrated 24 hour plasma gastrin concentration increased from 416 to 927 pmol/h/l. Topics: Adult; Circadian Rhythm; Double-Blind Method; Duodenal Ulcer; Gastric Acid; Gastrins; Histamine H2 Antagonists; Humans; Male; Middle Aged; Piperidines; Triazoles | 1990 |
Loss of acid suppression during dosing with H2-receptor antagonists.
The suppression of intragastric acidity with H2-receptor antagonists may diminish with repeated administration. To assess the degree and dose-dependence of this tolerance after short-term dosing, two doses of the H2-receptor antagonists, ranitidine (300 mg nocte or q.d.s.) and sufotidine (300 mg or 600 mg b.d.), were given to healthy volunteers for 1 and 2 weeks, respectively. After 1 and 7 days of dosing with ranitidine 300 mg q.d.s. the median 24-h and night-time pH, measured by continuous 24-h pH-metry, dropped from 3.7 to 2.2 and 5.8 to 3.2, respectively (P less than 0.0001 for both). The decline in median pH with ranitidine 300 mg nocte was only significant during the night (from 4.1 to 2.9) (P less than 0.04). There was little change in plasma gastrin concentrations between days 1 and 7 with either dosage. With sufotidine 300 mg b.d. and 600 mg b.d. for 1 and 14 days, the median 24-h pH fell from 3.7 to 2.1 and from 4.6 to 2.6, respectively (P less than 0.0001). The equivalent medians for the night decreased from 6.3 to 2.3 and from 6.6 to 3.1 (P less than 0.0001). Gastrin concentrations did not change after 14 days of dosing with sufotidine 300 mg b.d., but increased significantly during dosing with sufotidine 600 mg b.d. (P less than 0.001). Significant tolerance developed in 7-14 days and it seemed to show some dose relationship. The mechanisms behind tolerance and the role of gastrin are discussed, but remain unclear. Topics: Adolescent; Adult; Dose-Response Relationship, Drug; Double-Blind Method; Drug Tolerance; Electrodes; Gastric Acid; Gastrins; Histamine H2 Antagonists; Humans; Hydrogen-Ion Concentration; Male; Middle Aged; Piperidines; Ranitidine; Triazoles | 1990 |
Tolerance during 8 days of high-dose H2-blockade: placebo-controlled studies of 24-hour acidity and gastrin.
Simultaneous 24-h intragastric and plasma gastrin concentrations were measured in 36 healthy subjects, when receiving placebo (day 0) and on days 1 and 8 of dosing with either placebo (n = 8), or high-dose H2-blockade with either ranitidine 300 mg q.d.s. (n = 8), ranitidine 1200 mg o.m. (n = 8), or sufotidine 600 mg b.d. (n = 12). Triplicate placebo studies demonstrated good reproducibility for this technique, with no significant differences of acidity or plasma gastrin concentration between the studies. There was a decrease in the anti-secretory activity of all three high-dose H2-antagonist regimens on day 8, when compared with that observed on day 1. This occurred in the presence of sustained or increasing hypergastrinaemia. It is concluded that a degree of tolerance develops during continued H2-blockade, and that this could be due to increasing gastrin drive to the parietal cells. Topics: Adult; Drug Tolerance; Gastric Acid; Gastrins; Histamine H2 Antagonists; Humans; Hydrogen-Ion Concentration; Male; Piperidines; Placebos; Ranitidine; Triazoles | 1990 |
The effects of 15 days of dosing with placebo, sufotidine 600 mg nocte or sufotidine 600 mg twice daily upon 24-hour intragastric acidity and 24-hour plasma gastrin.
The acid inhibitory effect of sufotidine, a potent, long-lasting, competitive H2-receptor antagonist, was studied in 12 healthy males in a double-blind, randomized, three-way cross-over study of the effect of placebo, sufotidine 600 mg nocte and sufotidine 600 mg b.d. given over 15 days. On day 1 and 15 of dosing with each regimen, each subject's 24-h ambulatory intragastric acidity was measured by radiotelemetry and 24-h plasma gastrin profiles were derived from hourly venous blood samples. Acid suppression was calculated as the decrease in the area under the curve of hydrogen ion activity vs time from that observed on placebo, and 24-h plasma gastrin calculated as the area under the curve of plasma gastrin concentration vs time. Twenty-four hour intragastric acidity during the fifteenth day of dosing with sufotidine 600 mg nocte and sufotidine 600 mg b.d. did not differ significantly, but on the first and fifteenth day of dosing nocturnal acidity was decreased to a greater extent by sufotidine 600 mg nocte than sufotidine 600 mg b.d. (P less than 0.005). After 15 days, the acid suppression afforded by sufotidine 600 mg b.d. was significantly attenuated (P less than 0.0005); this was associated with a rise in 24-h plasma gastrin (P less than 0.001). Thus, tolerance to the acid inhibitory effect of H2-receptor antagonists exists and is of rapid onset. We suggest that tolerance is mediated by the temporally associated rise in 24-h plasma gastrin, but we cannot exclude the possibility that other mechanisms, such as up-regulation of H2-receptors, also play a part. Topics: Adult; Double-Blind Method; Gastric Acid; Gastrins; Histamine H2 Antagonists; Humans; Hydrogen-Ion Concentration; Male; Piperidines; Triazoles | 1990 |
1 other study(ies) available for gastrins and sufotidine
Article | Year |
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Intragastric acidity and serum gastrin after sufotidine.
Topics: Gastric Acid; Gastrins; Histamine H2 Antagonists; Humans; Piperidines; Triazoles | 1990 |