Other NSAIDs of Choice for Rheumatoid Arthritis

Aspirin is an effective anti inflammatory and analgesic agent. Pain relief is achieved with relatively modest doses, far below those necessary for inflammation control. The patient reacts to the need for pain relief and will take fewer aspirin than prescribed because the lower dosage is better tolerated and less expensive. This often obviates the wanted effects. This pain-inflammation gap does not exist for most nonsteroidal anti inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), in which analgesic and anti inflammatory doses approximate each other. The range of toxic effects from aspirin is larger than that for nonsteroidal drugs. Gastric erosions and bleeding are far more prevalent with aspirin. Other organ systems are involved more by aspirin than by other drugs, and, in osteoarthritis, aspirin actually may militate against recovery by interfering with glycosaminoglycan synthesis.

[1]  K. Brandt,et al.  In vivo effect of aspirin on canine osteoarthritic cartilage. , 1983, Arthritis and rheumatism.

[2]  K. Brandt,et al.  Aspirin aggravates the degeneration of canine joint cartilage caused by immobilization. , 1982, Arthritis and rheumatism.

[3]  J. A. Mills,et al.  Aspirin and analgesic nephropathy. , 1982, JAMA.

[4]  K. Brandt,et al.  Marked suppression by salicylate of the augmented proteoglycan synthesis in osteoarthritic cartilage. , 1980, Arthritis and rheumatism.

[5]  K. Ivey,et al.  Incidence of gastric lesions in patients with rheumatic disease on chronic aspirin therapy. , 1979, Annals of internal medicine.

[6]  Ehrlich Ge Pathogenesis and treatment of osteoarthritis. , 1979 .

[7]  K D Brandt,et al.  Effect of salicylate on proteoglycan metabolism in normal canine articular cartilage in vitro. , 1979, Arthritis and rheumatism.

[8]  Russell R. Miller Deafness Due to Plain and Long‐Acting Aspirin Tablets , 1978, Journal of clinical pharmacology.

[9]  W. Seaman,et al.  Effect of aspirin on liver tests in patients with RA or SLE and in normal volunteers. , 1976, Arthritis and rheumatism.

[10]  J. Miller,et al.  Correlations between transaminase concentrations and serum salicylate concentration in juvenile rheumatoid arthritis. , 1976, Arthritis and rheumatism.

[11]  M. Samter Intolerance to Aspirin , 1973 .

[12]  M. Cattell,et al.  Mild analgesics. A review of their clinical pharmacology. , 1965, The American journal of the medical sciences.