Category: gastric ulcer

PPIs and C. difficile infection

Does the use of proton-pump inhibitors (PPIs) increase the risk of Clostridioides difficile infection?

Medical literature has debated whether PPIs increase the risk of C. difficile enteric infections for many years. Analysis of the issue has been complicated because proton-pump inhibitors are often taken together with antibiotics in triple therapy to eradicate Helicobacter pylori. Antibiotics can alter the normal gut microbiota allowing the proliferation of C. difficile. 

While the pathophysiological mechanisms remain unknown, the evidence increasingly supports the conclusion that PPIs increase the risk of C. difficile infection even without antibiotic use (Wolfe et al., 2021). There is a greater risk of C. difficile infection with PPIs than H2 receptor blockers (Kwok et al., 2012; Leonard et al., 2007). Although there is considerable variation among studies, overall PPIs also increase the risk of recurrent C. difficile infection (Kwok et al., 2012; Tariq et al., 2017).
Continue reading

Bismuth subsalicylate antacid versus antidiarrhoeal?

Bismuth compounds would aid peptic ulcer disease and acute diarrhoea. But bismuth subsalicylate inhibits prostaglandin production, and prostaglandins are cytoprotective, so wouldn’t the inhibition of prostaglandins lead to more mucosal damage?

Both subcitrate and subsalicylate bismuth salts (and also subgallate and subnitrate salts) are used.

Theoretically, the subsalicylate is better for diarrhoea because the salicylate additionally acts as an NSAID to reduce inflammation and reduce prostaglandin-mediated activation of chloride channels reducing chloride and hence water in the lumen of the bowel (the opposite effect to lubiprostone).

Meanwhile, theoretically, the subsalicylate is worse for peptic ulcer as it is hydrolyzed to salicylic acid, which will act as a COX inhibitor preventing the production of the prostaglandins. The prostaglandins have protective actions in the stomach, increasing mucosal blood flow, increasing mucus secretion, increasing bicarbonate secretion and, at high concentrations, reducing acid secretion.

In practice, both subsalicylate and non-subsalicylate bismuth compounds are used clinically for both gastric acid-related disease and diarrhoea, and there is no clear evidence of a difference. However, there have not been large, well-designed clinical trials to compare them directly.

NSAIDs increase risk of gastritis and gastric ulcers

What is the mechanism for NSAIDs leading to gastric ulcer formation? Can it also cause gastritis?

With high levels of acidity and digestive enzymes, and food movement, the stomach is an aggressive environment for the tissues lining the stomach wall. Prostaglandins mediate endogenous protective mechanisms, including (1) increased mucosal blood flow; (2) increased mucus secretion; (3) increased bicarbonate secretion; and, at high concentrations, (4) reduced acid secretion.

Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) inhibit the cyclo-oxygenase (COX) enzyme. COX is involved in the production of prostanoids, including classical prostaglandins. In the stomach, COX-1 is essential for the production of the protective prostaglandins. Therefore, inhibition of COX by NSAIDs increases the risk of gastritis (the general term for conditions involving inflammation of the lining of the stomach), including gastric ulcers.

© 2024 PharmaNUS

Theme by Anders NorenUp ↑

Skip to toolbar