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Canadian Journal of Anesthesia, Vol 35, 562-566, Copyright © 1988 by Canadian Anesthesiologists' Society


ARTICLES

Gastric fluid volume, pH, and emptying in elective inpatients. Influences of narcotic-atropine premedication, oral fluid, and ranitidine

JR Maltby, N Koehli, A Ewen and EA Shaffer
Department of Anaesthesia, Foothills Hospital, University of Calgary, Alberta.

One hundred and twenty healthy, elective surgical inpatients were randomly assigned to one of four groups. Between two and three hours before the scheduled time of surgery all patients ingested a marker dye, phenol red, 50 mg in 10 ml water, with placebo tablet alone (Groups 1 and 2), placebo tablet with 150 ml oral fluid (Group 3), or oral ranitidine 150 mg with oral fluid 150 ml (Group 4). Patients in Group 1 received oral diazepam or no premedication, while those in Groups 2, 3, and 4 received IM narcotic and atropine one hour preoperatively. Following induction of anaesthesia the residual gastric fluid was aspirated through a Salem sump tube and its volume, pH, and phenol red content measured. Mean volumes were Group 1: 24 ml; Group 2: 13 ml; Group 3: 17 ml; Group 4: 14 ml. Mean pH values were Group 1: 2.99; Group 2: 3.03; Group 3: 3.44; Group 4: 5.28. The amount of phenol red in the samples indicated at least 90 per cent gastric emptying had occurred in 90 per cent of patients. We conclude that, in healthy patients, 150 ml oral fluid is almost completely emptied from the stomach within two hours of ingestion, even when followed one hour later by narcotic-atropine premedication.


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Copyright © 1988 by the Canadian Anesthesiologists' Society.