Abstract
Forty-seven patients with active rheumatoid arthritis took part in an 8-week controlled study in which clotrimazole was compared with a standard nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory agent, ketoprofen. Although clotrimazole was shown to be effective in the treatment of the disease and superior to ketoprofen in certain measurements, it was also responsible for a high incidence of adverse effects. Improvement with clotrimazole took place more slowly but was more sustained than with ketoprofen. A significant rise in plasma cortisol and a fall in white cell count was observed in the clotrimazole treated patients.
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CITATION STYLE
Wojtulewski, J. A., Gow, P. J., Walter, J., Grahame, R., Gibson, T., Panayi, G. S., & Mason, J. (1980). Clotrimazole in rheumatoid arthritis. Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases, 39(5), 469–472. https://doi.org/10.1136/ard.39.5.469
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