Romanian Journal of Pediatrics (Dec 2015)

GASTRIC ULCER AFTER SHORT-TERM NONSTEROIDAL ANTI-INFLAMMATORY DRUGS ADMINISTRATION IN A SMALL CHILD – CASE REPORT

  • Ancuta Ignat,
  • Gabriela Paduraru,
  • Angelica Cristina Marin,
  • Anamaria Ciubara,
  • Valeriu V. Lupu,
  • Marin Burlea

DOI
https://doi.org/10.37897/RJP.2015.4.9
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 64, no. 4
pp. 403 – 405

Abstract

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Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory agents (NSAIDs) produce gastric lesions through two mechanisms: local irritation and systemic action. A 2 year and 10 months old female received NSAID for acute upper respiratory infection for 2 days and she developed coffee ground vomitus one day later. Upper gastrointestinal endoscopy revealed a gastric ulcer. She was negative for H. pylori infection, and she was diagnosed with NSAID – induced acute gastric ulcer in the absence of other causes of gastric ulcer. Gastric ulcers develop very rarely after a short-term administration of NSAIDs, which prompted us to report this case. Balancing the risk and the benefit of eradication therapy, it is indicated, for every patient who must follow a chronic treatment with anti-inflammatory drugs, to look for possible associated risk factors.

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