Background: Antacids, such as aluminium–magnesium hydroxide (AlMg(OH)3), or H2‐receptor antagonists, such as ranitidine, are common drugs used for treating peptic ulcer disease and acid‐related symptoms.
Methods: In a prospective double‐blind controlled study, 174 patients were randomized to a 4‐week course of treatment with either AlMg(OH)3 (acid‐binding capacity: 280 mval/day) or ranitidine 300 mg for active Helicobacter pylori‐associated duodenal ulcers (as determined by histology and the urease test). Before and after treatment, two biopsy specimens each were obtained from the antrum and corpus, and the grade and activity of gastritis, as well as H. pylori density, were determined using a score ranging from 0 = none to 4 = severe.
Results: Pre‐ and post‐treatment histology were available for 138 patients (AlMg(OH)3: 67, ranitidine: 71). Treatment with AlMg(OH)3 significantly increased the activity of corpus gastritis (Wilcoxon signed‐rank: P = 0.0014), while ranitidine treatment significantly increased both the grade and activity of corpus gastritis (P = 0.0002 and P = 0.0001 respectively). In the antrum, both regimens provoked a significant increase in the frequency of intestinal metaplasia, but this may be a consequence of sampling error.
Conclusions: Ranitidine and AlMg(OH)3 have an aggravating effect on H. pylori gastritis in duodenal ulcer patients. This should be considered a side‐effect of the respective drugs and is more pronounced with ranitidine.
SummaryHerbal medicinal products are indispensable in children, e. g., in functional gastrointestinal diseases and coughs and colds, especially when available in liquid dosing forms for which dosing can be adapted ideally to different age groups. Despite being generally accepted as safe, the ethanol content of many of these products, necessary for Galenic reasons, has raised questions regarding their safety. Therefore, safety data from more than 50,000 children in noninterventional pediatric studies with these products, as well as data from routine clinical use in several million children, were assessed. No evidence of the involvement of the ethanol content in any adverse drug reactions was found. This allows us to conclude that these herbal medicinal products are safe in the age groups for which they are authorized or registered and that the present labeling is adequate to allow for their safe use in the pediatric population.
Antacids show gastroprotective action against various irritants in experimental animals and enhance the healing of chronic gastroduodenal ulcers in humans but the mechanisms of these effects are unknown. The present study was designed to determine whether prostaglandin (PG) and epidermal growth factor (EGF), which also have protective and antiulcer properties, contribute to the action of antacids on rat's stomach. It was found that Maalox 70 and its active component, Al(OH)3, enhance significantly the healing of chronic gastric and duodenal ulcers observed during 7 and 14 days after their induction. Pretreatment with indomethacin caused a significant prolongation of ulcer healing, and this was accompanied by a significant reduction in PG and EGF formation, suggesting that both factors may be involved in ulcer healing. Maalox and Al(OH)3 failed to prevent the suppression of PG by indomethacin but were equally effective in ulcer healing in rats without and with indomethacin administration, suggesting that endogenous PG may not play any important role in the healing process by these drugs. Removal of salivary glands, the major source of EGF, also prolonged ulcer healing but, again, Maalox was as effective in ulcer healing as in rats with intact salivary glands. Our findings that Maalox at pH above 3.0 binds significant amounts of EGF, enhances the binding of EGF to the ulcer area, and stimulates mucosal growth, suggest that EGF may be involved in ulcer healing; however, because antacids are also effective after sialoadenectomy, EGF does not seem to be the major factor in ulcer healing by these drugs.
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