Mohr T, Küster G, de Vries J X, Waldherr R, Walter-Sack J, Rieser P F, Ritz E
Sektion Nephrologie, Universität Heidelberg.
Dtsch Med Wochenschr. 1990 Jan 26;115(4):129-32. doi: 10.1055/s-2008-1064981.
To assess the epidemiology of habitual use of analgesics in South-West Germany (i) urine specimens of employees of a factory, of patients seen by a general practitioner (GP) and of patients attending a renal clinic were examined for paracetamol; (ii) mucosa of the left renal pelvis was examined for the presence of capillary sclerosis as an index of habitual use of phenacetin or paracetamol in 258 consecutive autopsies; (iii) in a regional renal clinic, the frequency of analgesic nephropathy was determined amongst outpatients and amongst patients on hemodialysis. Paracetamol was found in the urine of 4.1% of factory employees, in 3.5% of patients seen by a GP and in 2% of patients seen in the renal clinic. Capillary sclerosis was found in only one of 258 autopsies, in a patient dialysed for analgesic nephropathy. During the past two years, analgesic nephropathy was diagnosed in 3% of all patients seen for nephrological examination. Analgesic nephropathy was the cause of terminal renal failure in 15 of 166 patients (9.4%) on dialysis. The present study documents that habitual use of paracetamol-type analgesics continues in the general population despite the ban of phenacetin.