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1.
BACKGROUND: Although Helicobacter pylori has been established as a major etiologic factor of chronic gastritis and makes an important contribution to peptic ulceration, the reason why H. pylori causes different gastroduodenal diseases in different people is at present not clear. GOALS: The aim of this study is to identify risk factors associated with duodenal ulcers in H. pylori-infected patients in a multivariate context. STUDY: Demographic data, personal habits, stressful life events, psychologic distress, severity of histology of antral mucosa, and serum pepsinogen I concentrations were studied in 54 consecutive dyspeptic patients with duodenal ulcers and 40 patients with functional dyspepsia. RESULTS: As compared with functional dyspepsia patients, duodenal ulcer patients had more smokers (53.7% vs. 12.5%, P=0.000), higher pepsinogen I levels (median 96.0 vs. 74.5 ng/mL; P=0.002), more males (74.1% vs. 42.5%, P=0.004), more single (22.6% vs. 7.5%, P<0.05), and less in religion belief (44% vs. 70%, P<0.05). Only smoking remained significant on multivariate analysis (odds ratio=10.86, 95% CI=2.92-40.41, P<0.001). Among nonsmokers, only serum pepsinogen I level was found higher in duodenal ulcer patients as compared with functional dyspepsia patients (88 vs. 71, P<0.05). CONCLUSIONS: Smoking and hyperpepsinogenemia are associated with increased risk for duodenal ulcer in H. pylori-infected patients.  相似文献   

2.
BACKGROUND: It has previously been shown that corpus-dominant grade and activity of Helicobacter pylori gastritis in combination with intestinal metaplasia in the antrum or corpus are risk markers for the development of stomach cancer. If one point is scored for each of these three parameters, a gastric cancer risk index is obtained that permits prediction of the risk of gastric cancer developing on the soil of H. pylori gastritis. The aim of the present study was to evaluate the accuracy of the gastric cancer risk index based on a large number of patients compared with dyspeptic controls. METHODS: In 415 biopsied patients with gastric carcinoma, biopsy specimens taken from the antrum and corpus were investigated retrospectively. From this group of patients, 244 patients positive for H. pylori were compared with 244 sex- and age-matched H. pylori-infected patients with functional dyspepsia. RESULTS: H. pylori gastritis was detected in 395 carcinoma patients (95.2%). The 244 sex- and age-matched patients significantly more frequently had corpus-dominant H. pylori gastritis (compared with NUD controls). The incidence of intestinal metaplasia was also significantly increased. For a gastric cancer risk index score of 3 points (i.e. corpus pronounced grade and activity of gastritis, and intestinal metaplasia in antrum or corpus), a sensitivity of 93% and a specificity of 85% for the presence of gastric carcinoma can be calculated. CONCLUSION: Using the proposed risk index, the topographic grading of H. pylori gastritis in the antrum and corpus enables the diagnosis of a 'risk gastritis' to be made.  相似文献   

3.
BACKGROUND/AIMS: To investigate changes in the histology and the Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) prevalence and density of the gastric mucosa, as well as in fasting serum gastrin and serum pepsinogen I, depending on completeness of vagotomy, and in cases of recurrent ulcer, during 14 years after operation in duodenal ulcer patients. METHODOLOGY: 122 vagotomized duodenal ulcer patients were studied twice on average 9 and 14 years after operation. The presence of recurrent ulcer and completeness of vagotomy were assessed simultaneously endoscopically and by endoscopic Congo red test. The histology of the gastric antrum and corpus mucosa was assessed in accordance with the Sydney system. The amount of H. pylori in the specimens was detected by microscopic counting; gastrin and pepsinogen I in serum were determined radioimmunologically. RESULTS: During the 14-year follow-up period, complete vagotomy patients were characterized by a smaller amount of active antrum gastritis and a larger amount of active chronic corpus gastritis involving corpus atrophy in 46% of cases 14 years after operation. Recurrent ulcer patients were characterized by a significantly higher prevalence of high-grade H. pylori colonization and active mucosal inflammation in the antrum as well as by a lower level of active mucosal inflammation and atrophy in the corpus and a higher serum pepsinogen I level compared with complete vagotomy cases. The data of incomplete vagotomy patients without recurrent ulcer became more similar to those recorded for recurrent ulcer patients. CONCLUSIONS: In duodenal ulcer patients, changes in the histology of the gastric antrum and corpus mucosa as well as in H. pylori prevalence and density and in serum pepsinogen I levels are different depending on completeness of vagotomy during 14 years after operation.  相似文献   

4.
BACKGROUND AND AIMS: The classification of gastritis by using the revised Sydney system suggests that there are two types of Helicobacter pylori-related gastritis. The aim of the present study was to examine the risk factors that might be involved in the presence of either atrophic gastritis or intestinal metaplasia of the gastric corpus of Japanese patients. METHODS: Biopsy samples were obtained from the gastric corpus in 154 patients with dyspepsia, and the degree of atrophy or intestinal metaplasia was determined histologically. The correlation between several variables and presence of atrophy or intestinal metaplasia was evaluated by using multivariate analysis. RESULTS: Among the 11 variables, which included age, peptic ulcer diseases and H. pylori infection, H. pylori infection was the major risk factor associated with the presence of atrophic gastritis or intestinal metaplasia of the gastric corpus. In contrast, duodenal ulcer (DU) disease reduced the risk of contracting both conditions. Age was an independent risk factor only for intestinal metaplasia of the gastric corpus. When 128 H. pylori-positive subjects were analyzed, DU and age were similarly associated with the presence of both conditions. CONCLUSIONS: These results suggest that DU reduces the risk for contracting atrophic gastritis and intestinal metaplasia, and age is an independent risk factor for intestinal metaplasia of the gastric corpus in dyspeptic Japanese patients.  相似文献   

5.
BACKGROUND: Distribution and nature of gastritis are major determinants of clinical outcome of H. pylori infection. The gastric inflammatory changes associated with this infection in developing countries have not been systematically studied. AIMS: To evaluate the inflammatory changes in gastric antrum and corpus in patients with duodenal ulcer and H. pylori infection, before and after H. pylori eradication therapy. METHODS: Histology and H. pylori density were studied in gastric biopsies obtained from 53 consecutive patients with active duodenal ulcer and H. pylori infection. Biopsies were obtained before and 4 weeks after H. pylori eradication therapy, from the anterior and posterior walls of the antrum and corpus, and were evaluated according to the Sydney system. RESULTS: In the pre-H. py/ori eradication antral biopsies, chronic gastritis, active gastritis, atrophy, intestinal metaplasia (IM) and lymphoid follicles / aggregates were seen in 53 (100%), 49 (92%), 11 (21%), 7 (13%) and 28 (53%) patients, respectively. In the corresponding biopsies from gastric corpus, these changes were seen in 49 (92%), 23 (43%), 2 (4%), 2 (4%) and 8 (15%), respectively. All changes except IM were significantly more frequent and of higher grade in the antrum. The grade of chronic gastritis was significantly higher in antrum than corpus; the frequency of gastritis in the antrum and corpus was similar (100% vs. 92%). H. pylori density was also higher in the antrum and correlated well with the grades of chronic gastritis and activity at both sites. Eradication of H. pylori was achieved in 39 patients (74%), and led to significant decrease in gastritis; no change was seen in patients who did not eradicate the organism. CONCLUSIONS: Antral-predominant chronic gastritis and activity are present in more than 90% of patients with H. pylori infection associated with duodenal ulcer, and the grade of gastritis correlates with the density of the organism. Eradication therapy results in improvement of both chronic gastritis and activity.  相似文献   

6.
INTRODUCTION H pylori is a major cause of gastritis and peptic ulcer disease (PUD), and has been implicated in the development of gastric malignancy[1-3]. The prevalence of H pylori, a worldwide infection, varies greatly among countries and among populati…  相似文献   

7.
Biopsy sampling of the gastric mucosa at diagnostic endoscopy provides information that cannot be obtained otherwise. The most common indication for gastric biopsy is the need to know whether the patient is infected with Helicobacter pylori or not and whether the stomach is gastritic or not. Microscopic examination of gastric biopsy specimens gives, in addition to H. pylori status, information about the grade, extent, and topography of gastritis- and atrophy-related alterations in the gastric mucosa. This information provides further possibilities for the assessment of risk and likelihood of various gastric disorders. The presence of atrophy (loss of mucosal glands) results in failures in secretory functions of the corresponding mucosa and leads to errors in the homeostasis of normal gastric physiology. The grade of atrophy of the corpus mucosa linearly correlates with peak and maximal output of acid. The presence of advanced (moderate or severe) corpus atrophy indicates an extremely hypochlorhydric or achlorhydric stomach in which, for example, ordinary peptic ulcer is unlikely or impossible in spite of a possible H. pylori infection. Some well characterized and common topographic phenotypes of H. pylori gastritis and atrophic gastritis can be delineated as follows: Predominance or restriction of the H. pylori-related inflammation in antrum, in association with a nonatrophic corpus mucosa--of which phenotype is the most common--and with an increased risk of peptic ulcer disease, duodenal ulcer in particular ("duodenal ulcer phenotype" of gastritis); the presence of atrophic gastritis in corpus of the stomach ("corpus predominant gastritis"), which indicates a low risk of peptic ulcer and a reduction in the capacity of the patient to secrete acid; the occurrence of advanced atrophic gastritis and intestinal metaplasia multifocally in the stomach (advanced "multifocal atrophic gastritis"), which are features of a gastritis type and which also indicate a low acid secretion capacity and an increased risk of gastric neoplasias ("gastric cancer phenotype of gastritis"), suggesting a need for a careful exclusion of concomitant presence of small focal neoplastic or dysplastic lesions; and the presence of normal and healthy gastric mucosa, which indicates an extremely low risk of both peptic ulcer disease or gastric cancer and, therefore, is a finding of high clinical relevance. The presence of duodenal or gastric ulcer in conjunction with normal, healthy gastric mucosa suggests either aspirin or nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs to be the most likely cause of the ulcer.  相似文献   

8.
OBJECTIVE: Based on a large trial of Helicobacter pylori-positive peptic ulcer patients, we studied whether the size of the ulcer, along with other clinical and histological characteristics, has any effect on healing. We also studied the clinical and endoscopic characteristics associated with size of the peptic ulcer. MATERIAL AND METHODS: A total of 333 consecutive patients with H. pylori infection and peptic ulcer were enrolled (mean age 54.8+/-12.7 years). Location of the ulcer was recorded by gastroscopy and the presence of H. pylori was assured by rapid urease test, histology and by serum H. pylori IgG and IgA antibody measurement. The diameter of the ulcer was measured by placing the opened biopsy forceps (7 mm) beside it. Biopsy specimens were examined in accordance with the Sydney system. RESULTS: Mean size of the peptic ulcer was 13.2+/-8.3 in corpus, 11.3+/-5.3 in antrum, 13.8+/-7.8 in angulus, 9.5+/-5.3 in prepylorus and 9.2+/-4.7 mm in duodenum (duodenal versus gastric type; p<0.05). Average size of the ulcers was 9.4+/-5.3 mm in patients with Forrest III type and 11.5+/-6.8 in other types (p<0.05). Patients who were >or=50 years of age, currently smoking, or who had corpus-predominant chronic gastritis or atrophic gastritis, had larger ulcers than others. Size of index ulcers, successful eradication of H. pylori and the presence of atrophic gastritis were independent factors for healing. The odds ratio was 11.5 (95% CI 3.3-40.5; p<0.01) for eradication of H. pylori, 3.5 (95% CI 1.1-11.2; p<0.05) for size of the index ulcer (10 mm) and 3.4 (95% CI 1.2-9.8; p<0.05) for atrophic gastritis versus no atrophy. CONCLUSIONS: Size of the peptic ulcer, successful H. pylori eradication and atrophic gastritis were independent factors for the healing of peptic ulcers. A number of clinical and endoscopic variables (age, current smoking, corpus-predominant gastritis, Forrest classification) were associated with size of the peptic ulcer in H. pylori-positive patients.  相似文献   

9.
OBJECTIVES: One of the counter-effects of Helicobacter pylori eradication therapy is subsequent obesity. Ghrelin is a recently discovered growth hormone releasing peptide. This endogenous secretagogue increases appetite and facilitates fat storage. The majority of circulating ghrelin is produced in the gastric mucosa. Therefore, we aimed at investigating changes in ghrelin immunoreactivity in gastric mucosa tissues of patients infected with H. pylori. METHODS: Sixty-one patients with H. pylori infection (25 cases each of duodenal and gastric ulcer, and 11 cases of gastritis) and 22 healthy controls without H. pylori infection were included in the study. H. pylori-infected patients received standard proton pump-based triple therapy followed by histological examination and (13)C-urea breath test to confirm H. pylori eradication. H. pylori was eradicated in 50 out of 61 patients. Biopsy specimens were obtained from antrum and corpus before and 3 months following eradication. Ghrelin expression was evaluated immunohistochemically with an anti-ghrelin antibody, and the number of ghrelin-positive cells determined per 1 mm(2) of the lamina propria mucosa. RESULTS: There was no relationship between ghrelin immunoreactivity and body weight or body mass index for healthy controls. The number of ghrelin-positive cells was significantly lower for H. pylori-infected patients than for healthy controls. However, the ghrelin-positive cell number increased significantly following H. pylori eradication without significant change in severity of atrophy. CONCLUSIONS: These data indicated that H. pylori infection affected ghrelin expression. After H. pylori eradication, gastric tissue ghrelin concentration increased significantly. This could lead to the increased appetite and weight gain seen following H. pylori eradication.  相似文献   

10.
Background: It has previously been shown that corpus-dominant grade and activity of Helicobacter pylori gastritis in combination with intestinal metaplasia in the antrum or corpus are risk markers for the development of stomach cancer. If one point is scored for each of these three parameters, a gastric cancer risk index is obtained that permits prediction of the risk of gastric cancer developing on the soil of H. pylori gastritis. The aim of the present study was to evaluate the accuracy of the gastric cancer risk index based on a large number of patients compared with dyspeptic controls. Methods: In 415 biopsied patients with gastric carcinoma, biopsy specimens taken from the antrum and corpus were investigated retrospectively. From this group of patients, 244 patients positive for H. pylori were compared with 244 sex- and age-matched H. pylori -infected patients with functional dyspepsia. Results: H. pylori gastritis was detected in 395 carcinoma patients (95.2%). The 244 sex- and age-matched patients significantly more frequently had corpus-dominant H. pylori gastritis (compared with NUD controls). The incidence of intestinal metaplasia was also significantly increased. For a gastric cancer risk index score of 3 points (i.e. corpus pronounced grade and activity of gastritis, and intestinal metaplasia in antrum or corpus), a sensitivity of 93% and a specificity of 85% for the presence of gastric carcinoma can be calculated. Conclusion: Using the proposed risk index, the topographic grading of H. pylori gastritis in the antrum and corpus enables the diagnosis of a 'risk gastritis' to be made.  相似文献   

11.
BACKGROUND/AIM: cagA gene polymorphism of Helicobacter pylori contributes to clinical outcome of patients. We investigated the implication of the cagA polymorphism in young Japanese patients using paraffin-embedded sections. METHODS: We studied 71 young patients with gastric cancer or with duodenal ulcer. H. pylori infection was confirmed by sections with Giemsa staining and immunohistochemical staining and the degree of gastritis was evaluated. DNA was extracted from paraffin-embedded sections of 20 patients both from the gastric corpus and the antrum. A portion of cagA gene was amplified with polymerase chain reaction, followed by direct sequencing of the fragment. RESULTS: We established a novel method to determine the cagA subtype using paraffin-embedded sections. We found that all the samples possessed East-Asian type cagA both in the corpus and the antrum, not only in patients with gastric cancer but also with duodenal ulcer. Although the cagA gene sequence was completely identical between the gastric corpus and the antrum in all patients, the corpus gastritis was more prominent in patients with gastric cancer than those with duodenal ulcer. CONCLUSIONS: cagA polymorphism can be evaluated with the use of paraffin-embedded sections. The degree of corpus gastritis may not be regulated by cagA diversity only.  相似文献   

12.
AIM: To develop a serum or histological marker for early discovery of gastric atrophy or intestinal metaplasia. METHODS: This study enrolled 44 patients with gastric adenocarcinoma, 52 patients with duodenal ulcer, 14 patients with gastric ulcer and 42 consecutive healthy adults as controls. Each patient received an endoscopy and five biopsy samples were obtained. The degrees of histological parameters of gastritis were categorized following the Updated Sydney System. Anti-parietal cell antibodies (APCA) and anti-Helicobacter pylori (H pylori) antibodies (AHPA) were analyzed by immunoassays. H pylori infection was diagnosed by rapid urease test and histological examination. RESULTS: Patients with gastric cancer and gastric ulcer are significantly older than healthy subjects, while also displaying higher frequency of APCA than healthy controls. Patients with positive APCA showed higher scores in gastric atrophy and intestinal metaplasia of corpus than patients with negative APCA. Patients with positive AHPA had higher scores in gastric atrophy, intestinal metaplasia, and gastric inflammation of antrum than those patients with negative AHPA. Elderly patients had greater prevalence rates of APCA. Following multivariant logistic regression analysis, the only significant risk factor for antral atrophy is positive AHPA, while that for corpus atrophy is positive APCA. CONCLUSION: The existence of positive APCA correlates with glandular atrophy in corpus and the presence of positive AHPA correlates with glandular atrophy in antrum. The existence of serum APCA and AHPA betokens glandular atrophy and requires further examination for gastric cancer.  相似文献   

13.
Corpus gastritis is protective against reflux oesophagitis.   总被引:22,自引:0,他引:22       下载免费PDF全文
BACKGROUND: Gastric acid is important in the pathogenesis of reflux oesophagitis. Acid production by the gastric corpus is reduced in corpus gastritis. AIMS: To determine whether corpus gastritis protects against reflux oesophagitis. METHODS: Patients presenting for elective oesophagogastroduodenoscopy were studied. Two biopsy specimens were taken from the antrum, corpus, and cardia and stained with haematoxylin/eosin and Diff-Quick II stains. The presence and severity of gastritis were graded according to a modified updated Sydney classification. RESULTS: Of 302 patients, 154 had endoscopic signs of reflux oesophagitis. There was no difference between patients with and controls without oesophagitis in the overall infection rates with Helicobacter pylori. Acute or chronic corpus gastritis occurred less often in patients with than those without reflux oesophagitis. Compared with controls, corpus gastritis was less severe in patients with reflux oesophagitis. The presence of acute or chronic gastritis in the corpus was significantly correlated with either type of gastritis in other areas of the stomach. In a multivariate logistic regression, age, sex, smoking status, and the presence of chronic corpus gastritis all exerted a significant influence on the presence of reflux oesophagitis. Chronic corpus gastritis was associated with a 54% reduced risk for reflux oesophagitis. CONCLUSIONS: While infection with H pylori alone may not affect the occurrence of reflux oesophagitis, the development of chronic corpus gastritis seems to be protective.  相似文献   

14.
We investigated the prevalence of peptic ulcer in dyspeptic patients in China to analyze the influence of age, sex, and Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) infection. The results showed that the prevalence of gastric and duodenal ulcer increased with age. In patients under 60 years old, the prevalence of duodenal and gastric ulcers in females was markedly lower than that in males, especially the prevalence of duodenal ulcer. The prevalence of duodenal ulcer and gastric ulcer in H. pylori-infected patients was markedly higher than in patients without H. pylori infection. In the patients under 60 years old, sex differences were still seen in both H. pylori-positive and H. pylori-negative patients. The prevalence of gastric and duodenal ulcers was markedly increased with age in both H. pylori-positive and H. pylori-negative patients. Multivariate logistic regression analysis showed that age, male sex, and H. pylori infection were three independent risk factors for gastric and duodenal ulcers.  相似文献   

15.
OBJECTIVE: A strong correlation exists between atrophic gastritis and the intestinal type of gastric carcinoma. Duodenal ulcer disease characteristically has an antral predominant gastritis and a lower risk for gastric cancer. The aim of this study was to investigate the extent and distribution of intestinal metaplasia in duodenal ulcer in countries differing in gastric cancer incidence. METHODS: Topographically mapped gastric biopsy specimens (median 11) were obtained from patients with duodenal ulcer in four countries (Korea, Colombia, USA, and South Africa). Sections were stained with a triple stain and evaluated for Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori), active inflammation, and intestinal metaplasia. RESULTS: One hundred and sixty-five patients with duodenal ulcer were examined (29 from Korea, 52 from Colombia, 62 from the USA, and 22 from South Africa). The percentage of biopsies with intestinal metaplasia was significantly greater in Korean patients (86%) compared with that in other countries (50%) (p = 0.0004). Intestinal metaplasia was most prevalent in the antrum lesser curve and greater curve, and the body lesser curve. Intestinal metaplasia was present in the gastric corpus of 38% of duodenal ulcer patients from Korea compared with an average of 10% elsewhere (p = 0.018). No differences were observed in the density or distribution of H. pylori infection or in the degree of active gastritis between countries. CONCLUSIONS: Although antral predominant gastritis is the prevalent pattern of gastritis in duodenal ulcer, intestinal metaplasia in the gastric corpus may be found with geographic differences. These findings suggest that duodenal ulcer and gastric cancer are not mutually exclusive diseases but are rather ends of the spectrum of H. pylori infection.  相似文献   

16.
BACKGROUND AND AIM: The influence of Helicobacter pylori on gastric acid secretion differs with the status of gastritis. The histological characteristics of gastritis in H. pylori-positive patients with reflux esophagitis have not been fully investigated. We therefore studied the pattern of endoscopic gastric mucosal atrophy and degree of histological gastritis in such patients. METHODS: Subjects comprised 41 H. pylori-positive patients with reflux esophagitis, 41 age- and sex-matched patients with duodenal ulcer, and 41 patients with early gastric cancer. The endoscopic pattern of gastric mucosal atrophy was reviewed, and the degree of histological gastritis in biopsy specimens from the antrum and corpus was assessed in accordance with the updated Sydney system. RESULTS: The grade of endoscopic and histological gastric mucosal atrophy in patients with reflux esophagitis was significantly lower than that in patients with gastric cancer, and the histological scores for antral atrophy and metaplasia in patients with reflux esophagitis tended to be lower than those in patients with duodenal ulcer. In patients with reflux esophagitis and duodenal ulcer, the scores for antral inflammation and activity tended to be higher than those for the corpus. Conversely, the inflammation and activity score in patients with early gastric cancer showed a corpus-predominant gastritis pattern. CONCLUSION: In H. pylori-positive patients with reflux esophagitis, the degree of endoscopic gastric mucosal atrophy is low and histologically there is an antral-predominant gastritis pattern. Therefore, gastric acid secretion in H. pylori-positive patients with reflux esophagitis may be augmented by H. pylori infection.  相似文献   

17.
The role of gastrin in ulcer pathogenesis.   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Duodenal ulcer patients are characterized by an antrum-predominant, body-sparing, nonatrophic Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) gastritis, which results in increased gastrin release and increased acid secretion. The increased gastrin release is caused by the infection impairing the acid-mediated inhibitory control of gastrin release. The elevated levels of the gastrin stimulate the healthy uninflamed, non-atrophic acid-secreting region of the stomach to secrete excess amounts of acid. The increased gastrin also exerts trophic effects on the oxyntic mucosa, causing hyperplasia of both the enterochromaffin-like cells and the parietal cells. These trophic changes in the mucosa further enhance its ability to secrete acid. The increased acid secretion results in an increased duodenal acid load, causing gastric metaplasia of the duodenal bulb and eventually the development of ulceration. In H. pylori-infected subjects without duodenal ulceration, a different pattern of gastritis is seen. This includes atrophy of the antrum, which reduces the number of G-cells and thus the degree of hypergastrinaemia induced by the antral infection. There are usually also varying degrees of inflammation and atrophy of the acid-secreting mucosa, which impair its ability to secrete acid in response to gastrin stimulation. The combined effects of the atrophy of the antrum and the inflammation of the antrum of the body mucosa therefore prevent H. pylori-induced acid hypersecretion and may result in varying degrees of hypochlorhydria. The particular pattern of gastritis that a subject develops in response to H. pylori infection and their likelihood of developing a duodenal ulcer is likely to be determinded by host genetic factors plus dietary factors.  相似文献   

18.
AIM: To determine the distribution of cagG gene of Helicobacter pylori(Hpylori) isolates cultured from patients with various digestive diseases and its relationship with gastroduodenal diseases.METHODS: cagG was amplified by polymerase chain reaction in 145 H pylori isolates cultured from patients with chronic gastritis (n=72), duodenal ulcer (n=48), gastric ulcer (n=17), or gastric and duodenal ulcer (n=8), and the relationship between cagGstatus and the grade of gastric mucosal inflammation was determined.RESULTS: cagG was present in 91.7% of the 145 H pylori isolates, with the rates were 90.3%, 93.8%, 88.2% and 100.0%, respectively, in those from patients with chronic gastritis, duodenal ulcer, gastric ulcer, and gastric and duodenal ulcer. There was no significant difference among the four groups (P>0.05). The average grade of gastric mucosal inflammation in the antrum and corpus was 1.819±0.325and 1.768±0.312, respectively in cagG positive patients,whereas the average inflammation grade was 1.649±0.297,1.598±0.278 respectively in cagG negative cases (P>0.05).CONCLUSION: cagG gene of H pylori was quite conservative,and most H pylori strains in Chinese patients were cagG positive.cagG status was not related to clinical outcome or the degree of gastric mucosal inflammation. Therefore, cagG can notbe used as a single marker for discrimination of H pylori strains with respect to a specific digestive disease.  相似文献   

19.
The aim of the present study was to investigate the mechanism by which gastric atrophy does not tend to occur in patients with duodenal ulcer despite frequent Helicobacter pylori infection. This investigation was performed in 60 patients with duodenal ulcer and 63 age-matched gastritis patients. Endoscopic findings in the antrum and corpus were classified as normal, atrophic and superficial changes. Biopsy specimens were taken from the antrum and corpus. Ninety per cent of patients with duodenal ulcer and 63.5% of patients with gastritis had H. pylori infection (P<0.01). The incidence of normal findings in duodenal patients was 30% in antral regions and 50% in the corpus (P<0.05). Atrophic change was observed in 21.7% of patients in the antrum and 3.3% of patients in the corpus (P<0.01). The grade of inflammation in duodenal ulcer specimens was significantly higher in the antrum than in the corpus (P<0.01). >H. pylori density was significantly higher in the antrum than in the corpus in ulcer patients (P<0.01). No significant difference in endoscopic findings, >H. pylori density or the grade of inflammation was found between the antrum and corpus in patients with gastritis. The mean intragastric ammonia concentration was 10.3 mg/dL in duodenal ulcer patients and 6.2 mg/dL in gastritis patients (P<0.01). The mean pH was 3.5 and 4.6 in ulcer and gastritis specimens, respectively (P<0.01). Our data suggest that gastric mucosa injury is less frequently associated with duodenal ulcers than with gastritis due to the low >H. pylori density in the corpus and to the higher acid output that neutralizes the ammonia produced by H. pylori.  相似文献   

20.
BACKGROUND: Many individuals are infected with the bacterium Helicobacter pylori. Some develop ulcers or mucosal atrophy. AIMS: To correlate the histological characteristics of the H. pylori -induced gastritis to the immunoblot pattern of the H. pylori infection and to compare the presence of H. pylori bacteria in tissue specimens with ELISA serology and immunoblot analysis. METHODS: One hundred and sixty-six consecutive patients were referred to gastroscopy. Forty patients were excluded for various reasons and 126 were included in the study. RESULTS: Twenty-three patients had ulcerations and 25 erosions. Ninety-two (73%) had a chronic gastritis and in 90 (71%) it involved both the antrum and corpus. Ninety-one (72%), of whom 96% had a chronic gastritis, had visible bacteria in the tissue specimens, used as the 'gold standard' for the detection of infection. In patients with chronic gastritis 65 (70%) had positive H. pylori ELISA serology, 27 (30%) had negative H. pylori ELISA, while 76 (83%) had a positive immunoblot pattern. The ELISA positive patients had more advanced chronic gastritis but a lower frequency of metaplasia and atrophy. Acute inflammatory activity in the chronic gastritis had a high immunoreactivity to 120 kDa (CagA) protein and was significantly correlated to antibody reactivity to proteins in the 53-65 kDa range (heat shock proteins) and to a 43 kDa subunit. Metaplasia and atrophy in antrum was associated with a 62 kDa protein band. CONCLUSION: Almost all H. pylori-infected patients had a pangastritis, visible in both antrum and corpus. Acute inflammatory activity in the chronic gastritis and the presence of metaplasia and atrophy in antrum were associated with a specific immunoblot pattern, indicating infection with more virulent strains. Immunoblot analysis had a better sensitivity than ELISA H. pylori serology.  相似文献   

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