Home
Scholarly Works
Effects of chronic NSAIDs on gastric mucosal...
Journal article

Effects of chronic NSAIDs on gastric mucosal injury related to mucosal prostanoids, and plasma drug concentrations in human volunteers

Abstract

The relationship between endoscopically observed gastric mucosal damage, elicited following repeated oral intake for 7 d of four NSAIDs, to theie effects on antral and fundic production of PGE2, 6-keto-PGF1α and TxB2 (assayed by GC-MS), mucosal histology and plasma concentration profiles was studied in 40 normal males. Subjects received azapropazone (APZ) 600 mg b.i.d., indomethacin (IND) 50 mg t.i.d., naproxen (NAP) 500 mg b.i.d., piroxicam (PIR) 20 mg qq.d., or one placebo capsude t.i.d (N=8/group). Plasma NSAIDs (HPLC) levelled at 7 d. Mucosal damage occurred in the antrum region with IND and NAP. APZ and PIR exhibited no differences compared to placebo. NAP and IND reduced all three prostanoids in the antrum while APZ and PIR were ineffective. Fundic PGE2 was reduced by IND, NAP and PIR; APZ had no effects. Thus, mucosal damage relates to effects on prostanoid production in the antrum but not in the fundus.

Authors

Rainsford KD; James C; Johnson DM; Stetsko PI; Hill RE; Salena BJ; Hunt RH

Journal

Inflammation Research, Vol. 39, No. Suppl 1, pp. c21–c23

Publisher

Springer Nature

Publication Date

March 1, 1993

DOI

10.1007/bf01972708

ISSN

1023-3830

Contact the Experts team