, by excluding other factors, 48 patients were included in the study, diagnosed as drug-induced esophagitis with their history, endoscopic view, and histopathologic evaluation. Results: There were 34 (70.9%) female and 14 (29.1%) male patients in the study, and their average ages were 35.1 and 32.4, respectively. Clinical symptoms were odynophagia (79.1%), retrosternal pain (62.5%), and dysphagia (47.9%). The reason for these symptoms for 85.5% of the patients was related to insufficient water consumption while taking the pill, taking the pill in recumbent position, or both. Tetracycline and its variant, doxycycline, were responsible for 52% of the patients, and 62.5% of the drugs were in capsule form. Ulcers were at the proximal and middle third of the esophagus in 79.2% of the patients. In the histopathologic evaluation, nonspecific acute inflammatory changes were found in 29.1% of the cases. Various proton pump inhibitors and sucralfate were used in the treatment. While no perforation and structure were detected, 1 patient died because of repetitive arterial bleeding. Conclusion: Almost every kind of drug, particularly doxycycline, can cause ulcer in the esophagus. Pill esophagitis can be prevented by warning patients about drinking water sufficiently and sitting up while taking the pill.
Objectives
Lung injury is one of the most important risk factor for morbidity and mortality, especially in older people. There are several reasons causing acute lung injury (ALI) and acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) such as pneumonia, sepsis, viruses, oxidants, and trauma. Evidence has shown that carnosine has many properties, such as suppressing hydroxyl, superoxide, and peroxyl radicals, inhibiting peroxidation, membrane protection and wound healing. We aimed to analyze the effects of carnosine on lung injury in this systematic review.
Content
A systematic research was performed in Pubmed, Web of Science, and Scopus databases for following keywords; “carnosine” AND “lungd” until October 31st, 2020. Bias analysis was done with RevMan 5.3 software.
Summary
We screened totally 51 publications and only nine articles were used for the final analysis. Eight animal studies and one in vitro study were included in this study. All studies indicated that carnosine has beneficial effects on improving lung injury.
Outlook
The study demonstrates that carnosine may be a promising new therapeutic agent and help to improve lung injury by reducing oxidative stress, proinflammatory cytokines, and apoptosis. Further investigations are needed to elucidate which mechanism is more effective to cure lung damage, especially in humans.
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