3.8 Article

Assessment of gastric acidity by short-duration intragastric pH-monitoring with standardised breakfast in functional and some other dyspepsias

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TERMEDIA PUBLISHING HOUSE LTD
DOI: 10.5114/pg.2020.99041

Keywords

intragastric pH-metry; dyspepsia; pepsinogens; atrophic gastritis

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Introduction: Preliminary assessment of gastric secretion in the treatment of organic and functional dyspepsia may offer advantages over the empirical administration of proton pump inhibitors suggested by most clinical guidelines. Aim: To develop a simplified pH-metric test with standardised meal, and on its basis to perform an assessment of the functional state of gastric secretion in the most common dyspepsias. Material and methods: Serum pepsinogen 1 and 2 were used for reference. Intragastric pH-monitoring was performed during 45 min in basal phase and 135 min after provocative breakfast (507 kcal, 100 mg caffeine). Consecutive adults enrolled in the study were divided into groups: 1 -Non-dyspeptic -30 persons; 2 -Duodenal peptic ulcer - 13; 3 -GERD - 82; and 4 -Functional dyspepsia - 125 patients. Results: There was a moderate association between concentration of pepsinogen-1 and parameters of pH-monitoring. The best correlation coefficients were for the nadir pH in basal conditions and the time of acid neutralisation > 3.5 after the meal - r = -0.534 and r = -0.541, respectively (p < 0.0001). Using these two parameters we considered discriminants for four patterns of acidity. Proposed criteria of Hipo-anacidity included an absence of active secretion of hydrochloric acid in basal (pHmin > 5) and postprandial phases, with the achievement of stable pH < 3.5 after 80 min from meal time. They showed sensitivity 88.9% and specificity 100%. In cases of a detected pattern of hyperacidity, these parameters were 80% and 66.67%, respectively. According to the prevalence of hyperacidic cases, the groups were ranked in the following order: duodenal ulcer (76.9%) - GERD (51.1%) - functional dyspepsia (40.8%) - non-dyspeptic (19.0%). Conclusions: Acid production is increased among patients with functional dyspepsia. There is a small number of patients with functional dyspepsia (12.1%) with hypochlorhydria due to atrophic gastritis. The latter was independently associated with age > 50 years (OR = 20.139), symptoms of postprandial distress-syndrome (OR = 9.821), and signs of atrophy (OR = 5.914) after conventional endoscopy.

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