2018
DOI: 10.1111/apt.15052
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Review article: the pharmacological causes of colon ischaemia

Abstract: Summary Background Colon ischaemia is the most common ischaemic disorder of the gastrointestinal system, can affect any segment of the colon, and may present with a range of symptoms. Diagnosis can be challenging due to symptom overlap with other conditions, varied aetiology, and often rapid and self‐resolving course. Aim To review comprehensively the literature regarding the pharmacological aetiologies of colonic ischaemia to enhance the understanding of the various mechanisms of disease, presentations, distr… Show more

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Cited by 19 publications
(22 citation statements)
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References 134 publications
(163 reference statements)
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“…It is important to note that of these three drug categories, the one that was most commonly used in both cohorts was constipation‐inducing drugs (64.1% of patients in the younger cohort and 83.8% of patients in the older cohort). One mechanism proposed for the linkage between constipation‐inducing medications and colon ischaemia is that constipation may cause an increase in intracolonic luminal pressure which diminishes colon blood flow and results in mucosal‐to‐serosal shunting of blood with consequent reduction of the arterio‐venous oxygen difference and subsequent decreased mucosal and submucosal oxygen extraction . In a large retrospective analysis, Walker et al found that use of constipation‐inducing drugs was highly prevalent in patients diagnosed with colon ischaemia compared with matched controls.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…It is important to note that of these three drug categories, the one that was most commonly used in both cohorts was constipation‐inducing drugs (64.1% of patients in the younger cohort and 83.8% of patients in the older cohort). One mechanism proposed for the linkage between constipation‐inducing medications and colon ischaemia is that constipation may cause an increase in intracolonic luminal pressure which diminishes colon blood flow and results in mucosal‐to‐serosal shunting of blood with consequent reduction of the arterio‐venous oxygen difference and subsequent decreased mucosal and submucosal oxygen extraction . In a large retrospective analysis, Walker et al found that use of constipation‐inducing drugs was highly prevalent in patients diagnosed with colon ischaemia compared with matched controls.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…One proposed explanation is that antipsychotic medications, particularly clozapine and quetiapine, have significant antiserotonergic and anticholinergic activity which has been shown to lead to altered colon motility and reduction in colonic blood flow . Another suggested theory is that many antipsychotic medications have constipation as a side effect, which in turn is a risk factor for colon ischaemia . In the general population, however, usage of antipsychotic medications in younger patients is significantly less frequent than in older patients, with one study showing significantly fewer patients between the ages 18 and 64 on antipsychotic medications compared with patients aged 65 and above (26.53% vs 39.89%; P = 0.03) .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…1 IC associated with stimulant laxatives is believed to result from stimulated colonic motility increasing intraluminal pressure, compressing the splanchnic circulation to decrease colonic perfusion. 3 We therefore believe that the patient's IC arose from constipation and stimulant laxative treatment. To our knowledge, this is the first report of infantile IC complicating constipation.…”
Section: Case Reportmentioning
confidence: 95%
“…Many studies have demonstrated associations between medications and colon ischaemia, but none has shown direct causality . Some classes of drugs are known to affect the vascular system and, therefore, colonic blood flow.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%