Journal article

THE EFFECT OF CIGARETTE SMOKING ON GASTRIC ACID SECRETION AND GASTRIC MUCOSAL BLOOD FLOW IN MAN

DR FLETCHER, A SHULKES, KJ HARDY

Australian and New Zealand Journal of Medicine | Published : 1985

Abstract

Abstract: Smoking leads to a higher incidence of peptic ulcer and delays healing of those ulcers. Possible mechanisms include increased gastric acid secretion, reduced gastric mucosal blood flow, and reduced duodenal bicarbonate production. In six subjects we determined the effect of one hour of cigarette smoking on gastric mucosal blood flow (14C–aminopyrine clearance), acid secretion (triple lumen perfused oro–gastric tube), and plasma levels of gastrin and pancreatic polypeptide. Smoking reduced acid secretion from a median of 433 (range 160–707) μmol/min to 166 (47–340) μmol/min (p < 0.05) and blood flow from 66 (40–70) ml/min to 36 (22–58) ml/min (p<0.05). There was no change in plasma ..

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