Nosocomial pneumonia in intubated patients given sucralfate as compared with antacids or histamine type 2 blockers. The role of gastric colonization

1987 
Abstract Gram-negative nosocomial pneumonia may result from retrograde colonization of the pharynx from the stomach, and this may be more likely when the gastric pH is relatively high. We studied the rate of nosocomial pneumonia among 130 patients given mechanical ventilation in an intensive care unit who were receiving as prophylaxis for stress ulcer either sucralfate (n = 61), which does not raise gastric pH, or conventional treatment with antacids, histamine type 2 (H2) blockers, or both (n = 69). At the time of randomization to treatment, the two groups were similar in age, underlying diseases, and severity of acute illness. Patients in the sucralfate group had a higher proportion of gastric aspirates with a pH ≤4 (P<0.001) and significantly lower concentrations of gram-negative bacilli (P<0.05) in gastric aspirates, pharyngeal swabs, and tracheal aspirates than did patients in the antacid–H2-blocker group. The rate of pneumonia was twice as high in the antacid–H2 group as in the sucralfate group (95 ...
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