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Perforation diclofenac

Geriatric Considerations - Summary Use of NSAIDs in older adults increases the risk of GI complications including gastric ulceration, bleeding, and perforation. These complications are not necessarily preceded by less severe GI symptoms. Concomitant use of a proton pump inhibitor or misoprostol reduces the risk for gastric ulceration and bleeding, but may not prevent long-term GI toxicity. No clinical data exist to support reduced GI toxicity with the use of diclofenac. [Pg.358]

The same warning applies to evaluation of the incidence of complicated ulcers (bleeds, perforation, and obstructions). The incidence of these serious events with celecoxib was 2.7% (11 events) versus 5% (20 events) in patients taking diclofenac or ibuprofen, a non-significant difference. [Pg.1007]

Perforation of the terminal ileum occurred in one patient who had taken a high dose (400 mg/day) of mod-ified-release diclofenac (11). [Pg.1110]

Deakin M. Small bowel perforation associated with an excessive dose of slow release diclofenac sodium. BMJ 1988 297(6646) 488-9. [Pg.1112]

To study effects on clinically important GI complications with celecoxib, the CLASS study used celecoxib (400 mg twice daily, or twice the highest FDA-approved dose) compared to diclofenac and ibuprofen at standard dose. Celecoxib use was reported to be associated with a reduced incidence for the combined end point of symptomatic ulcers and ulcer complications (perforations, gastric outlet obstruction, or bleeding). Some subjects also used aspirin for car-dioprotection, but there is concern that GI safety of COX-2 inhibitors is blunted with use of concomitant aspirin (even 30 mg of aspirin can suppress gastric prostaglandin prodnction)." For patients taking aspirin and celecoxib, nicer complications were higher than with celecoxib only, but lower than with traditional NSAIDs. [Pg.1696]

The risk of serious upper gastrointestinal bleeding was inereased by the use of more than one NSAID in a meta-analysis of data from three ease-eontrolled studies (odds ratio 4.9 with one NSAID and 10.7 with two). Another study provided similar findings the odds ratio was 7.1 with one NSAID and 12.3 with two or more NSAIDs. Similar findings have been reported with aspirin and NSAIDs, see NSAIDs + Aspirin Anti-inflammatory dose , p.l42. Analysis of yellow eard reports to the CSM in the UK, of gastrointestinal perforation, obstruetion, uleeration or bleeding with diclofenac, naproxen, and ibuprofen, revealed that 6% of the patients were reeeiving another non-aspirin NSAID. ... [Pg.151]

A 52-year-old man developed skin necrosis after he tried to give himself an intramuscular injection of diclofenac 75 mg but actually injected the drug into an arterial perforator branch of the superficial femoral artery. [Pg.185]

A lower gastrointestinal risk with coxibs was confirmed in a retrospective case-control study of the incidence of peptic ulcer bleeding and perforation in users of COX-2 selective and non-selective NSAIDs [3 ]. The study was based on 2.2 million adults taking celecoxib, diclofenac, ibuprofen, naproxen, rofecoxib, or valdecoxib. Adjusted odds ratios (OR) compared with naproxen were ibuprofen 0.86 (95% Cl = 0.68, 1.09), rofecoxib 0.79 (0.62, 1.02), diclofenac 0.66 (0.47, 0.94), valdecoxib 0.50 (0.26, 0.97), and celecoxib 0.45 (0.35, 0.58). The overall... [Pg.241]


See other pages where Perforation diclofenac is mentioned: [Pg.886]    [Pg.220]    [Pg.102]    [Pg.213]    [Pg.2248]    [Pg.1697]    [Pg.1108]    [Pg.143]    [Pg.235]    [Pg.26]    [Pg.242]    [Pg.123]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.124 ]




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