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    Zentralbl Chir. 2004 Dec;129(6):510-2.

    [A case of severe gangrenous ischemic colitis following nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug intake]

    [Article in German]

    Ablassmaier B, Hartmann J.

    Abteilung für Allgemein- und Visceralchirurgie, St. Marienkrankenhaus Berlin-Lankwitz. ablassmaier@rinecker.de

    A 48-year-old woman presented with bloody diarrhea, exsiccosis, abdominal pain and fever. A CT-scan showed air inclusions and thickening of the colonic wall. Laparotomy revealed partial necrosis of the colonic wall from the cecum to the rectosigmoid junction. After colectomy with ileorectostomy recovery was uneventful. The histological examination showed erosions, ulcerations, necrosis and some abscesses along the colonic wall which were not typical for ulcerative colitis or Crohn's disease. The patient reported medication with diclofenac for rheumatoid arthritis. The most probable diagnosis was NSAID-induced colitis. That NSAID may cause colitis has often been described in literature, but there have been only few records on nearly total colon necrosis.

    PMID: 15616917 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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    • Diclofenac (Cataflam®, Voltaren®-XR)

      Diclofenac is used to relieve pain, tenderness, swelling, and stiffness caused by osteoarthritis (arthritis caused by a breakdown of the lining of the joints), rheumatoid arthritis (arthritis caused by swelling of the li...