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Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs peptic ulcer with

Proton pump inhibitors (PPIs), such as omeprazole, esomeprazole, lansoprazole, pantoprazole, and rabeprazole, are commonly prescribed to treat symptoms of heartburn, acid reflux, chest pain, dyspepsia, and chronic cough. PPIs inhibit the transfer of protons into the stomach lumen. Pharmacological acid suppression is thus used to treat gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) and esophagitis, peptic ulcers, and Helicobacter pylori infection as well as to prevent ulcer development with concurrent nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug use. [Pg.396]

H2 Antagonists and the Treatment of Peptic Ulcers. Treatment of peptic ulcers is a complicated and multilevel therapy in which Hj antagonists are very successful and widely used (and abused). Peptic ulcers may affect either the stomach (gastric ulcers, less common overall but more common in people with iatrogenic [i.e., physician-induced] ulcers from the use of nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs [NSAIDs]) or the duodenum (duodenal ulcers). The lining of the stomach or duodenum is attacked by the digestive juices to such an extent that the protective mucous layer on the surface has... [Pg.267]

Ibuprofen (Motrin), a nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug, to a 49-year-old female with a peptic ulcer. [Pg.408]

For millions of years prokaryotes have orchestrated their genetic players to produce survival strategies that overcome almost all ills that bacterial flesh is heir to. Infection of mammalian gastric mucosae by Helicobacter spp. is due to this organism s insistence on habitation of probably the most unfriendly environment in the mammalian body, the inside of the stomach. The eradication of H. pylori for treatment of peptic ulcer disease not associated with nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), steroids or severe stress is now accepted as part of medical treatment of this set of illnesses. Whether the infection should always be treated with violence is a point of discussion [1]. [Pg.117]

Gastric erosions are aphthous ulcers that do not penetrate the muscularis mucosa. They are most often related to H. pylori infection (Levine and Rubesin 1995). Other causative agents include alcohol, salicylates, and nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs). They are also seen in critically ill patients due to multiple trauma, sepsis, shock, etc. At double-contrast barium studies, gastric erosions appear as shallow small, 1-2-mm-diameter collections of barium surrounded by a radiolucent rim of oedema an appearance mirrored at endoscopy with a haemorrhagic centre and oedematous rim (Fig. 5.2a,b) (Levine and Rubesin 1995 Sohn et al. 1995 Dheer et al. 2002). H. pylori infection is also related to the presence of lymphoid follicular hyperplasia, which is commonly present in patients with peptic ulcer disease (Fig. 5.3a,b) (Torigian et al. 2001). [Pg.90]


See other pages where Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs peptic ulcer with is mentioned: [Pg.141]    [Pg.1163]    [Pg.1309]    [Pg.772]    [Pg.1469]    [Pg.119]    [Pg.91]    [Pg.851]    [Pg.431]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.27 , Pg.269 , Pg.270 , Pg.271 , Pg.277 , Pg.279 , Pg.494 , Pg.872 , Pg.885 ]




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Anti-inflammatory drugs

Anti-ulcer drugs

Anti-ulcerants

Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatories

Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory

Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs

Ulcer drugs

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