mdlinx mdlinx
Physician Assistant Articles on MDLinx Top Read Articles
of 2012

Gastrointestinal lesions and complications of low-dose aspirin in the gastrointestinal tract Best Practice & Research Clinical Gastroenterology , 05/11/2012

Sostres C et al. – Current evidence indicates that low dose aspirin (ASA) can damage the lower gastrointestinal (GI) tract also, but the real size of the problem is still unknown.

  • Low dose aspirin (ASA) use has been associated with a wide range of adverse side effects in the upper gastrointestinal (GI) tract, which range from troublesome symptoms without mucosal lesions to more serious toxicity, including ulcers, GI bleeding, perforation and even death.
  • Upper GI symptoms in low dose ASA users are common but often careless or misinterpreted and they are not always related to the presence of mucosal injury.
  • Usually, low dose ASA related ulcers are reasonably small and asymptomatic, and probably heal over a period of weeks to a few months.
  • But, the real clinical problem occurs when the ulcer results in a GI complication (mostly bleeding).
  • The estimated average excess risk of symptomatic or complicated ulcer related to low dose ASA is five cases per 1000 ASA users per year.
  • Death is the worst outcome of GI complications in low dose ASA users, but data about this aspect are scarce.

Read this article on Best Practice & Research Clinical Gastroenterology



Register now to view all the MDLinx contents (FREE)!

  • Stay current on the latest literature, research and clinical news
  • Get special communications and offers from MDLinx and our sponsors
  • Receive invitations to paid market research
View Samples and Register

Stay current - Media Tool

Newsletter
RSS
Follow Us
Facebook

Receive free subspecialty
"5-minute updates" via email

Sign up!

Send the E-mail Newsletter to a Colleague


Send

Subscribe to our free RSS feeds:
Get the latest news in your specialty automatically added to your newsreader or your personal My Yahoo!, Google, My MSN or My AOL page. Learn More

Follow Us on Twitter
Twitter is a rich source of instantly updated information. Join today and follow @MDLinx to start receiving tweets. Learn More

Close