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Low‐dose intravenous erythromycin: effects on postprandial and fasting motility of the small bowel

22

Citations

31

References

2000

Year

Abstract

A low dose of erythromycin administered intravenously during the postprandial state significantly inhibits small bowel motility, whereas administration during the fasting state initiates a phase III resembling the nocturnal rather than the diurnal phase III. These effects of erythromycin may indicate interference with vagal pathways. Due to its inhibitory effects, the clinical use of erythromycin in patients with hypomotility should be reconsidered, and the potential usefulness of these effects in patients with exaggerated intestinal motility deserves further attention.

References

YearCitations

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