Antacid characteristics of three drugs containing aluminium and magnesium salts (combination of clay with aluminium and magnesium hydroxides, aluminium and magnesium hydroxide mixture and hydrotalcite) have been studied in a dynamic situation simulated by the "artificial stomach" model, simultaneously taking into account both gastric fluxes, a constant secretory flux and variable emptying fluxes. Therapeutic doses of the drugs were added 1. to 100 ml of 0.1 N HCl, without or with 1% or 5% meat extract, and 2. 100 ml of pooled human gastric juice (96 mmol/l, pH 1.1). In addition, antacid activity of 0.5 g aluminium and magnesium hydroxides, taken alone or in combination, were evaluated when added to 100 ml of 0.1 N HCl. In aqueous HCl solution or in human gastric juice, the three antacid drugs exhibited 1. a neutralising activity characterised by pH-rise and 2. a buffering capacity close to pH 3.8. In addition, hydrotalcite exhibited also buffering capacity at pH 1.2. The antacid-induced capacity, expressed as H+ mmol, to recover initial pH were very similar, indicating that antacid physiochemical properties are similar in HCl solution or in gastric juice. H+ consumption depended upon emptying fluxes. The same antacid characteristics were observed when antacids were mixed with 1% meat extract while 5% meat extract resulted in a modification of antacid characteristics. Therefore the antacid capacities of respective mixtures were of smaller magnitude (50-60%) than the sum of the activities of antacids plus meat extracts.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)