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Medical Service, Dallas Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center, and Department of Internal Medicine, University of Texas Southwestern Medical School, Dallas, Texas 75216
Aspirin causes peptic ulcers
predominately by reducing gastric mucosal cyclooxygenase (COX) activity
and prostaglandin synthesis. Because aspirin circulates for only a few
hours, we hypothesized that aspirin's inhibitory effect on gastric COX
activity must be prolonged. We performed a placebo-controlled
experiment in healthy humans to determine the duration of inhibition of
aspirin on gastric mucosal COX activity (PGE2 and
PGF2
synthesis rates). Recovery of gastric COX activity
after stopping aspirin was slow and linear. Seventy-two hours after
325-mg aspirin, gastric COX activity was still reduced by 57%
(P < 0.001). Duration of inhibition of gastric COX
activity was estimated to be 7-8 days after 325-mg aspirin and 5 days after 81-mg aspirin. Recovery of gastric prostaglandin synthesis
after 325-mg but not after 81-mg aspirin occurred at slower rates in
subjects with Helicobacter pylori-associated gastritis than
in those with normal histology. In conclusion, aspirin inhibits gastric
COX activity for much longer than predicted from its pharmacokinetic
profile, explaining why aspirin at widely spaced intervals is ulcerogenic.
prostaglandins; thromboxanes; ulcer; Helicobacter pylori
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