Peptic ulcers and reflux come down to one cell — the gastric parietal cell — and the acid it pumps. Every acid-suppressing drug works at one labelled point on this cell, so the diagram below is the topic.
1. Proton-pump inhibitors (PPIs) — the most effective
Omeprazole, pantoprazole, esomeprazole irreversibly block the H⁺/K⁺ ATPase — the final common step of acid secretion — so they outperform all others. Best taken before food.
- Uses: GERD, peptic ulcer, H. pylori regimens, NSAID protection, Zollinger-Ellison syndrome.
- Long-term cautions: ↓ B₁₂/magnesium/calcium absorption, C. difficile risk, rebound acid on stopping.
2. H₂-receptor blockers
Famotidine (ranitidine was withdrawn over NDMA) blocks histamine at the H₂ receptor — effective, especially for nocturnal acid, but weaker than PPIs and prone to tolerance.
3. Antacids
Magnesium (laxative) and aluminium (constipating) salts, often combined, neutralise acid already secreted — fast symptom relief, no healing effect. They bind other drugs, so separate dosing.
4. Mucosal protectants
- Sucralfate — coats the ulcer base.
- Misoprostol — a prostaglandin analogue that restores mucosal defence; useful for NSAID ulcers but contraindicated in pregnancy (abortifacient).
- Bismuth — protective and mildly anti-H. pylori.
5. H. pylori eradication
Most peptic ulcers are caused by H. pylori. Standard triple therapy = a PPI + two antibiotics (clarithromycin + amoxicillin or metronidazole) for 7–14 days; eradication prevents recurrence.
Exam tip: PPIs act at the final step (the pump), which is exactly why they are the most powerful acid suppressors — a favourite one-liner. And always treat the cause: test for and eradicate H. pylori.
Anchor all five classes to their point on the parietal cell, remember that PPIs hit the final common pathway, and acid-peptic pharmacology becomes one clean, memorable picture.
Test yourself
0 / 2A quick check on this topic — tap an answer for instant feedback.
Q1. The most potent acid suppressors, acting on the final step (the proton pump), are:
PPIs irreversibly block the H⁺/K⁺ ATPase — the final common pathway of acid secretion.Q2. Standard H. pylori eradication uses:
Triple therapy = a PPI + two antibiotics (clarithromycin + amoxicillin/metronidazole).