1. Academic Validation
  2. Morphological features of rat gastric mucosa after acute and chronic treatment with amtolmetin guacyl: comparison with non-selective and COX-2-selective NSAIDs

Morphological features of rat gastric mucosa after acute and chronic treatment with amtolmetin guacyl: comparison with non-selective and COX-2-selective NSAIDs

  • Digestion. 2003;68(2-3):124-32. doi: 10.1159/000074726.
Giuseppina Morini 1 Elena Guaita Mirka Lazzaretti Daniela Grandi Gabriella Coruzzi
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Human Anatomy, Pharmacology and Forensic Medicine, University of Parma, Parma, Italy.
Abstract

Background/aims: The compound amtolmetin guacyl (AMG) has been characterized in both animal and human studies as a novel non-selective non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID) endowed with lower ulcerogenicity in comparison with traditional NSAIDs due to a unique mechanism of action, namely the increase in endogenous production of gastric nitric oxide.

Methods: Conscious rats were treated either acutely (4 h) or chronically (3 and 14 days) with intragastric AMG (50 and 150 mg/kg), the non-selective NSAID tolmetin (TOL, 30 and 100 mg/kg) or the COX-2-selective NSAID celecoxib (CXIB, 20 and 60 mg/kg). Macroscopically visible and histologic lesions were evaluated. The ultrastructure of mucosal microvasculature was assessed.

Results: (1) TOL and CXIB caused quantitatively greater endothelial damage and inflammatory cell infiltration than that induced by AMG; (2) AMG and CXIB, unlike TOL, did not cause epithelial damage after acute or chronic treatment, and (3) gastric lesions induced by TOL underwent adaptation during chronic treatment.

Conclusion: Endothelial cell damage in the gastric microvasculature is an early event following both non-selective and COX-2-selective inhibitors. The low gastric mucosal toxicity of AMG is confirmed after acute and chronic treatment.

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