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Showing 2 results for Omeprazole

Fariba Jaffary , Mohammad Ali Nilforoushzadeh , Hanieh Sharifian Koupaiee , Gita Faghihi , Seyed Mohsen Hosseini , Fateme Sokhanvari , Nazli Ansari , Giti Sadeghian ,
Volume 75, Issue 1 (4-2017)
Abstract

Background: Acne vulgaris is self-limiting, multifactorial disease involving sebaceous glands. Omeprazole is a proton pump inhibitor with in vitro antibacterial effects against staphylococcus aureus and anti-androgen that can be potential treatment of acne vulgaris. This study was designed to evaluate the efficacy of oral omeprazole and erythromycin 4% compared to doxycycline combination therapy in the treatment of acne vulgaris.

Methods: In this clinical trial study, patients with moderate acne were referred to Skin Diseases and Leishmaniasis Research Center, Isfahan University of Medical Science, Iran, during August 2014 until November 2015 and were randomized into two groups receiving topical erythromycin 4% plus omeprazole (34 patients) or doxycycline (35 patients) for 3 months. Moderate acne, lack of sensitivity to proton pump inhibitors, lack of warfarin, phenytoin, diazepam consumption, lack of active liver or kidney disease, being older than 12 years, were considered as inclusion criteria. Pregnant or lactating patients, patients with drug allergy history, patients taking oral contraceptives, acne topical medications (including retinoids) or systemic treatment within 30 days of study, patients with oligomenorrhea, hirsutism, acne conglobata, acne fulminant or body acne alone were excluded from the study. All patients were tested for Helicobacter pylori test at the beginning of the study.

Results: Both inflammatory and non-inflammatory lesions decreased in both groups with negative correlation with age (P< 0.05). There was no significant correlation between positive Helicobacter pylori test and inflammatory or non-inflammatory lesion reduction (P= 0.794, P= 0.514). Also, patient satisfaction and rate of total drug side effects was not different between two treatment groups. Rate of skin reactions was 20.58% in omeprazole treated group and 11.42% in doxycycline group. For side effects, other than skin it was 2.94% versus 14.28% respectively.

Conclusion: Omeprazole could be suggested as an alternative for doxycycline in the treatment of patients with moderate acne vulgaris especially in non-inflammatory lesions.


Mobina Zamanifard, Hamid Reza Norouzi, Fazilat Jokar Darzi , Malihe Safari,
Volume 83, Issue 5 (8-2025)
Abstract

Background: Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) is a human gastrointestinal pathogen that infects more than half of the world's population and leads to chronic gastritis and its role in the development of gastric ulcers, gastric cancer and gastric lymphomas is considered. However, eradication of this bacterium with triple therapy fails in more than 30% of cases. Therefore, efforts to find new treatment methods are increasing. As a result, this study was conducted to evaluate the effectiveness and tolerability of several drug regimens compared to the standard regimen.
Methods: This study is a randomized clinical trial in which patients with Helicobacter pylori infection were randomly selected in the endoscopy department of Amiralmomenin Hospital and the Gastroenterology Clinic of Professor Ghavamzadeh Clinic, Arak from October 2024 to March 2025 and were divided into three groups, including a control group and two intervention groups, with three different drug regimens. Four weeks after treatment, the rate of bacterial eradication in all three evaluation groups was assessed using fecal antigen testing and the treatment results were compared using appropriate statistical analyses.
Results: The frequency of negative test results in intervention group 2 was higher than in control and intervention group 1. (P<0.001) and the rate of Helicobacter pylori eradication was in intervention group 2 (94%), in control group (54%), and in intervention group 1 (20%). The chance of H.P eradication in intervention group 1 decreased by 84% compared to the control group and increased by 10.77 times in intervention group 2 compared to the control group. Also, a significant proportion of H.P eradication success was observed in people without diabetes (p-value = 0.022, Phi = -0.188, n = 150) and the rate of drug side effects was higher in intervention group 2 compared to the other two groups.
Conclusion: This study showed that compared to the standard regimen, a 2-week regimen of amoxicillin, omeprazole, and clarithromycin plus bismuth is a good, potent, and more cost-effective regimen for eradicating Helicobacter pylori.


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