Antacids and diagnosis in patients with atypical chest pain

Date First Published:
April 11, 2002
Last Updated:
March 19, 2003
Report by:
Stewart Teece, Clinical Research Fellow (Manchester Royal Infirmary)
Search checked by:
Ian Crawford, Manchester Royal Infirmary
Three-Part Question:
In [a patient with chest pain of uncertain aetiology] is [the use of antacids/alginates] useful for [differentiating between cardiac and gastro-oesophogeal causes]?
Clinical Scenario:
A 57 year old man presents with a one hour history of central chest pain the character of which he cannot describe. There is no radiation but there is mild sweating and subjective shortness of breath. He has a history of smoking, hypertension, angina and a hiatus hernia; the pain came on after a curry. He has a normal ECG on admission and an unremarkable examination. You cannot decide whether this is cardiac or oesophageal in origin and wonder whether a single dose of antacid might relieve his pain and therefore clarify the diagnosis.
Search Strategy:
Medline 1966-12/02 using the OVID interface.
Search Details:
[exp chest pain OR exp angina pectoris OR exp angina, unstable OR exp coronary disease OR exp myocardial infarction OR chest pain.af OR angina.af OR coronary.af OR myocardial.af OR cardiac.af OR myocard$.af] AND [ exp alginates OR exp antacids OR algin$,af OR antacid.af OR antacids.af OR gaviscon.af OR algicon.af OR gastrocote.af OR peptac.af OR topal.af]} LIMIT to human AND English language.
Outcome:
Altogether 374 papers were found only two of which directly addressed the three part question.
Relevant Paper(s):
Study Title Patient Group Study type (level of evidence) Outcomes Key results Study Weaknesses
Atypical chest pain of cardiac and esophageal origin. Henderson RD, Wigle ED, Sample K, et al. 1978, Canada 100 patients with typical reflux pain. 43 with atypical pain and investigations showing oesophageal disease and normal coronary arteries
Clinical trial Relief of pain with antacids 95% relief in typical reflux group. 18% atypical pain group Small numbers
No blinding
Statistical significance not assessed
Antacid type/dosage not described
Chest Pain- indigestion or impending heart attack. Simpson FG, Kay J, Aber CP. 1984, UK 46 patients with proven MI Survey Pain felt to be indigestion 21/46 (45%) Small numbers
Statistical significance not assessed
Relief of pain in those that had taken antacids 5/17 (29%)
Author Commentary:
Both studies are small, however in the Henderson paper if the 95% confidence intervals are calculated (81.5-100% typical, 9-30.2% atypical) there is a distinct difference between the two groups despite all the patients having normal ETTs and angiography. A further paper by Davies et al (1) has shown that the instillation of acid into the stomach decreases the angina threshold on exercise testing. The above tests would suggest that reflux affects angina and vice versa, the vagus nerve has been suggested as the common link between the two.
Bottom Line:
Antacids are useful in the relief of pain that is clearly oesohageal in origin but the effect is insufficiemtly specific to be of value in aiding diagnosis.
Level of Evidence:
Level 3: Small numbers of small studies or great heterogeneity or very different population
References:
  1. Henderson RD, Wigle ED, Sample K, et al.. Atypical chest pain of cardiac and esophageal origin.
  2. Simpson FG, Kay J, Aber CP.. Chest Pain- indigestion or impending heart attack.
  3. Davies HA, Rush EM, Lewis MJ, et al.. Oesophageal stimulation lowers external angina threshold.