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Comparative Study
. 1981 Mar;80(3):427-32.

Analgesic ingestion and chronic peptic ulcer

  • PMID: 7450436
Comparative Study

Analgesic ingestion and chronic peptic ulcer

D W Piper et al. Gastroenterology. 1981 Mar.

Abstract

The patterns of analgesic ingestion in gastric and duodenal ulcer patients were compared with those of matched community controls in order to ascertain differences that may exist between ulcer and nonulcer subjects of comparable age and sex. The differences sought concerned amounts and types of analgesics ingested. The types of analgesics studied were aspirin and acetaminophen, ingested either alone or together. Analgesics such as dextropropoxyphene and codeine were disregarded. It was found that there was a strong positive association between heavy analgesic intake and chronic gastric ulcer with a relative risk of 29.5. The association was most marked in female patients (relative risk = 51.8). The involvement of aspirin-containing and acetaminophen-containing drugs was of similar significance with relative risk of 17.3 and 24.4, respectively. Aspirin alone was the least frequently ingested. The association was only partly related to painful nonulcer health problems and to ulcer pain. No association was found between chronic duodenal ulcer and analgesic intake. The strong association found between gastric ulcer and heavy analgesic intake does not, per se, necessarily indicate a causal relationship.

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