医学
对乙酰氨基酚
阿司匹林
内科学
人口
肾脏疾病
慢性肾功能衰竭
疾病
逻辑回归
重症监护医学
麻醉
环境卫生
作者
C. Michael Fored,Elisabeth Ejerblad,Per Lindblad,Jon P. Fryzek,Paul W. Dickman,Lisa B. Signorello,Loren Lipworth,Carl‐Gustaf Elinder,William J. Blot,Joseph K. McLaughlin,M. M. Zack,Olof Nyrén
摘要
Several epidemiologic studies have demonstrated an association between heavy consumption of nonnarcotic analgesics and the occurrence of chronic renal failure, but it is unclear which is the cause and which is the effectIn a nationwide, population-based, case-control study of early-stage chronic renal failure in Sweden, face-to-face interviews were conducted with 926 patients with newly diagnosed renal failure and 998 control subjects, of whom 918 and 980, respectively, had complete data. We used logistic-regression models to estimate the relative risks of disease-specific types of chronic renal failure associated with the use of various analgesicsAspirin and acetaminophen were used regularly by 37 percent and 25 percent, respectively, of the patients with renal failure and by 19 percent and 12 percent, respectively, of the controls. Regular use of either drug in the absence of the other was associated with an increase by a factor of 2.5 in the risk of chronic renal failure from any cause. The relative risks rose with increasing cumulative lifetime doses, rose more consistently with acetaminophen use than with aspirin use, and were increased for most disease-specific types of chronic renal failure. When we disregarded the recent use of analgesics, which could have occurred in response to antecedents of renal disease, the associations were only slightly attenuatedOur results are consistent with the existence of exacerbating effects of acetaminophen and aspirin on chronic renal failure. However, we cannot rule out the possibility of bias due to the triggering of analgesic consumption by predisposing conditions.
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