Abstract
To assess the effect of a late-evening, high-fat meal on nocturnal supine gastro-oesophageal reflux, eight healthy volunteers (aged 20 to 38 years) underwent two ambulatory oesophageal pH-metry recordings, the first after a standardized light meal at 1930 h and the second after a high-fat meal including peppermint and chocolate, at 2130 h. Between 2300 and 0700 h, when subjects were supine, the median acid exposure time (percentage recording with pH < 4) increased from 0.0% (range, 0.0-6.8%) after the standardized meal to 7.9% (0.0-17.8%) after the high-fat meal (p = 0.031). Similarly, the median number of reflux episodes increased from 0 (0 to 11) after the standardized meal to 7 (0 to 26) after the high-fat meal (p = 0.031). Reflux occurred after both meals, but, in general, persistent nocturnal reflux was observed only after the high-fat meal. Thus, the analysis of oesophageal pH recordings should consider the effects of meal composition and timing on oesophageal acid exposure.