PMID: 15366676Sep 16, 2004Paper

Gastrointestinal complications related to NSAIDs

Gastroentérologie Clinique Et Biologique
L Beaugerie, Gérard Thiéfin

Abstract

Chronic use of non-salicylate NSAIDs causes in most individuals an asymptomatic enteropathy involving the small bowel, particularly its distal part. This enteropathy is characterised by an increase in intestinal permeability and a mild mucosal inflammation. Hypoalbuminemia and iron deficiency may occur. In addition, non-salicylate NSAIDs may cause focal lesions of the small intestine. Ulcerations and ulcers, that can be accidentally discovered during an ileoscopy, may cause acute or chronic bleeding. Deep ulcers may provoke sudden peritonitis. Small bowel diaphragms are rare fibrotic lesions, specifically associated with the use of non-salicylate NSAIDs or salicylates (duodenal diaphragms only). NSAID use is not associated with a constant toxicity on colonic mucosa. NSAID-induced colonic ulcers and diaphragms are rare. In patients with colonic diverticulosis, NSAID intake is a risk factor for severe attacks of diverticulitis. Acute or chronic use of non-salicylate NSAIDs increases the risk for ischemic colitis and flare-ups of inflammatory bowel disease. De novo colitis caused by non-salicylate NSAIDs are rare. The definite diagnosis of this entity relies on the absence of recurrence of colitis in the 2-3 following years. Such ...Continue Reading

Citations

May 27, 2008·The Journal of Steroid Biochemistry and Molecular Biology·Olivier HennebertRobert Morfin

❮ Previous
Next ❯

Related Concepts

Related Feeds

Anemia

Anemia develops when your blood lacks enough healthy red blood cells. Anemia of inflammation (AI, also called anemia of chronic disease) is a common, typically normocytic, normochromic anemia that is caused by an underlying inflammatory disease. Here is the latest research on anemia.