Objective - To assess the effect of aluminum hydroxide/magnesium hydroxide antacid and bismuth subsalicylate on gastric pH in clinically normal horses and to develop guidelines on the use of these agents for treatment of peptic ulcer disease in horses. Design - Prospective, randomized, controlled trial. Animals - 5 clinically normal adult horses with chronically implanted gastric cannulas. Procedure - Each horse received all 5 treatments (30 g of aluminum hydroxide/15 g of magnesium hydroxide, 12 g of aluminum hydroxide/6 g of magnesium hydroxide, 10.5 g of bismuth subsalicylate, 26.25 g of bismuth subsalicylate, and 5% methylcellulose control) with only 1 experiment performed each day. Gastric pH was measured via a glass electrode inserted through the gastric cannula for 1 hour before treatment and continued for 2 hours after treatment. Food or water was not given to the horses during the experiment. Measurements of gastric pH obtained during posttreatment hours were compared with pretreatment gastric pH values. Results - Only a dose of 30 g of aluminum hydroxide/15 g of magnesium hydroxide resulted in a significant increase in gastric pH over baseline or control values. Mean pH was 5.2 ± 0.62 and 4.59 ± 0.48 for posttreatment hours 1 and 2, respectively. Clinical implications - Oral administration of 30 g of aluminum hydroxide/15 g of magnesium hydroxide to adult horses should result in a mean hourly gastric pH ≥4.0 for at least 2 hours.
CITATION STYLE
Clark, C. K., Merritt, A. M., Burrow, J. A., & Steible, C. K. (1996). Effect of aluminum hydroxide/magnesium hydroxide antacid and bismuth subsalicylate on gastric pH in horses. Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association, 208(10), 1687–1691. https://doi.org/10.2460/javma.1996.208.10.1687
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.