Project Peach
Draft
We use cookies to enhance your browsing experience. By clicking 'I Understand and Accept', you consent to our use of cookies.
I understand and accept
No, I don't want to use cookies
Login
Don't have an account? Sign up
Show
Keep me logged in
Login
Forgotten your password?
My Account
Control Panel
An example toast message
Do Something
Login
en
en
Care Pack Pharmacy Logo
en
en
Change Language
Login
My Account
Control Panel
Nominate Us
Services
Our Pharmacy
Health & Advice
Log Out
Nominate Us
Login
en
en
Do Something
Login
en
en
Care Pack Pharmacy Logo
en
en
Change Language
Login
My Account
Control Panel
Nominate Us
Services
Our Pharmacy
Health & Advice
Log Out
Nominate Us
Login
en
en
Causes

Stomach ulcers are usually caused by an infection of Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) bacteria, or from taking anti-inflammatory medicines (NSAIDs), such as ibuprofen and aspirin.

These can break down the stomach's defence against the acid it produces to digest food, allowing the stomach lining to become damaged and an ulcer to form.

H. pylori bacteria

It’s common to have a H. pylori infection, and it’s usually harmless for most people.

But sometimes it causes ulcers in the stomach (gastric ulcer) or in the duodenum (duodenal ulcer).

It's not clear exactly why some people are more affected than others.

Anti-inflammatory medicines (NSAIDs)

NSAIDs are medicines widely used to treat pain, a high temperature (fever) and inflammation (swelling).

Commonly used NSAIDs include:

Many people take NSAIDs without having any side effects. But there's always a risk the medication could cause problems, such as stomach ulcers, particularly if taken for a long time or at high doses.

You may be advised not to take NSAIDs if you currently have or have had a stomach ulcer. 

Paracetamol can often be used as an alternative painkiller.

Lifestyle factors

There's little evidence that some lifestyle factors, like spicy foods, stress and alcohol, cause stomach ulcers. But they may make your symptoms worse.

It's thought that smoking increases your risk of developing stomach ulcers and may make treatment less effective.

Last Reviewed
21 January 2022
NHS websiteNHS website
Care Pack Pharmacy supports patients, carers and families with organised prescription services, repeat prescription support and dependable day-to-day pharmacy support.
GPhC premises registration number:
9013038
Superintendent Pharmacist:
Taimoor Altaf
Company Reg: 
15824501
Menu
About Us
Nominate Care Pack Pharmacy
Care Home Services
Pharmacy Services
Order Prescriptions
Health A-Z
Healthy Living Zone
Download Our App
Here for patients, carers and care homes
Clear prescription support, helpful medicines information and friendly pharmacy contact when you need us.
Care Pack Pharmacy © 2025
Website by bewell.uk
Privacy Policy
Cookies Policy
Terms & Conditions
Some images are illustrative and may include staged or digitally generated visuals. They are used to help explain our services and may not show actual patients, staff, premises, medicines, packaging or care settings. Services, delivery arrangements, app support and medication tray supply are subject to suitability, availability and pharmacy review.