Interpretation of the Bernstein Test: A Reappraisal of Criteria
- 1 March 1982
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American College of Physicians in Annals of Internal Medicine
- Vol. 96 (3) , 320-322
- https://doi.org/10.7326/0003-4819-96-3-320
Abstract
The esophageal acid infusion test (Bernstein test) was evaluated in respect to the following questions: Does chest pain predictably disappear after cessation of acid infusion and what is the relation between esophageal intraluminal pH and the degree of chest pain relief? Forty patients with subjective and objective evidence of gastroesophageal acid reflex, in whom esophageal acid infusion had reproduced substernal burning in a mean time of 3.1 min .+-. 0.8 SE, graded pain relief after stopping acid infusion when saline was being infused. Complete pain relief occurred in 47.5% of patients over a 20-min period. In 6 patients, esophageal pH was monitored for 30 min after administration of saline, antacid placebo-antacid and no treatment for a positive acid infusion test. Esophageal pH returned to normal (> 4.0) at the same rate (from 5.0-8.3 min) among patients in the 4 treatment groups, whereas chest pain continued and esophageal pH did not correlate with pain relief. The grading of pain relief was similar among the treatment groups, except at the 5-min period when antacids resulted in significantly better relief than no treatment.Keywords
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