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抑酸治疗过程中胃内亚硝酸盐和维生素C浓度的变化 Most nitrite entering the healthy
acid-secreting stomach is derived from dietary nitrate. The latter is
absorbed from the small intestine, 25% then being secreted by the salivary
glands into the mouth. Buccal organisms subsequently convert 20% of this
nitrate to nitrite. When this nitrite is swallowed, the ascorbic acid
in the acidic gastric juice reduces it to nitric oxide, which is absorbed
by the mucosa. In the process, the ascorbic acid is oxidized to dehydroascorbic
acid. When the intragastric pH is elevated by powerful anti-secretory
agents, this gastric chemistry is profoundly modified. At a neutral pH,
the swallowed nitrite does not react with ascorbic acid but accumulates
in the stomach. The level of nitrite in the gastric juice during treatment
with anti-secretory medication is particularly high after a nitrate-containing
meal. Powerful anti-secretory medication also lowers the intragastric
concentration of ascorbic acid and total vitamin C, probably because of
the relative instability of the vitamin at a higher pH. These changes
in the intragastric concentrations of nitrite and ascorbic acid are most
marked in Helicobacter pylori -infected subjects on proton pump inhibitor
therapy. It is recognized that an elevated nitrite-to-ascorbic acid ratio
predisposes to the formation of potentially carcinogenic N -nitroso compounds.
It is, however, unclear at present whether such compounds are formed within
the human stomach. Copyright 2001 Harcourt Publishers Ltd. [引自Baillieres Best Pract Res Clin Gastroenterol 2001 Jun;15(3):523-37] |