首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 250 毫秒
1.
BACKGROUND: Gastrin G cells and somatostatin D cells are important regulators of gastric acid secretion and alterations in their relative numbers may play a key role in gastroduodenal disease. AIM: To investigate the effect of Helicobacter pylori infection on the density of immunoreactive G and D cells in gastric antral and corpus biopsies from patients with dyspeptic complaints. METHODS: One hundred and twenty two patients with dyspeptic complaints had two antrum and two corpus biopsies taken during upper endoscopy. The severity of inflammation and the density of H pylori were evaluated semiquantitatively. In addition, the density and distribution of neuroendocrine cells, especially G and D cells, were examined using immunohistochemistry. Patients were divided into three groups, those with H pylori positive gastritis, H pylori negative gastritis, and histologically normal gastric mucosa. RESULTS: The number of immunoreactive G cells was significantly higher and the number of immunoreactive D cells lower in patients with H pylori positive gastritis compared with H pylori negative gastritis or histological normal gastric mucosa. The percentage of G cells as a percentage of mucosal endocrine cells was also raised and that of D cells was decreased. CONCLUSIONS: Helicobacter pylori infection produces alterations in the number of endocrine cells responsible for regulating acid secretion in relation to intragastric pH and feeding. The alterations correlate best with the severity of inflammation and not with H pylori density.  相似文献   

2.
AIMS: To assess the association between Helicobacter pylori-associated gastritis and HLA-DR antigen (class II antigen) expression. METHODS: Fifty endoscopic gastric biopsy specimens were studied for the presence of H pylori, degree and type of inflammation, and for HLA-DR antigen expression in the epithelium. The cases were chosen to represent different categories: inflamed gastric mucosa with (n = 13) and without (n = 20) H pylori, and non-inflamed mucosa (n = 17). RESULTS: The antigen was aberrantly expressed in the antral mucosal epithelium in 11 of 12 cases (92%) with acute-on-chronic gastritis when H pylori was also present. It was present in the antrum in only seven of 18 H pylori negative cases (39%) with acute-on-chronic/chronic gastritis. One of three cases of acute gastritis and three of seven cases of chronic gastric erosions (non-inflamed category) showed positive staining. Generally, there was more staining in the antral than body mucosa and in the surface/foveolar epithelium than in the glands. No aberrant HLA-DR antigen expression was found in the 10 cases of normal gastric mucosa examined. CONCLUSIONS: These findings suggest that H pylori may have a role in the induction of class II HLA antigen expression in chronic gastritis and lend support to the view that these organisms may be responsible for part of the inflammatory response.  相似文献   

3.
The purpose of the study was to examine gastric mucosal morphological changes in patients with gastroduodenal pathology after eradication therapy for Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori). A hundred and thirty-eight patients (40 females and 98 males) were examined. Of them, there were 122 patients with duodenal peptic ulcer, 8 with gastric peptic ulcer, 5 with erosive gastritis, 2 with chronic atrophic antral gastritis, and 1 with non-atrophic gastritis. Two months and a year after therapy, manifestations of gastric mucosal atrophy, the degree of inflammation, and its activity significantly diminished in patients with complete H. pylori eradication. Positive changes were observed mainly in the antral portion of the stomach. In patients with partial eradication, chronic inflammation and its activity became less. Two months and a year following therapy, positive changes in the gastric mucosa were absent in patients without H. pylori eradication.  相似文献   

4.
Spiral organisms were isolated from an antral gastric mucosal biopsy specimen from a dyspeptic patient with gastritis. Only corkscrew-shaped organisms resembling "Gastrospirillum hominis" ("Helicobacter heilmannii") but no Helicobacter pylori-like organisms were seen in histological sections. H. pylori was not cultured from specimens from this patient. On the basis of biochemical reactions, morphology, ultrastructure, and 16S DNA sequencing, the isolated "G. hominis" was shown to be a true Helicobacter sp. very similar to Helicobacter felis and the "Gastrospirillum" but was separate from H. pylori. "G. hominis" is a pleomorphic gram-negative cork-screw-shaped, motile rod with 3 to 8 coils and a wavelength of about 1 micrometer. In contrast to H. pylori, it has up to 14 sheathed flagellar uni- or bipolar fibrils but no periplasmic fibrils. "G. hominis" grows under microaerobic conditions at 36 and 41 degrees C on 7% lysed, defibrinated horse blood agar plates within 3 to 7 days and can be subcultured under microaerobic but not under anaerobic conditions on media similar to those used for H. pylori and H. felis. The small translucent colonies were, in contrast to those of H. felis, indistinguishable from those of H. pylori. "G. hominis" is, like H. pylori and H. felis, motile, is oxidase, catalase, nitrite, nitrate, and urease positive, and produces alkaline phosphatase and arginine arylamidase. Like H. pylori and H. felis, it is sensitive to cephalothin (30-microgram disc), resistant to nalidixic acid (30-microgram disc), and sensitive to most other antibiotics. The 16S DNA sequence clusters "G. hominis" together with "Gastrospirillum," H. felis, Helicobacter bizzozeronii, Helicobacter salmonii, Helicobacter nemestrinae, Helicobacter acinonychis, and H. pylori.  相似文献   

5.
6.
Although regenerating gene (Reg) protein is reported to have a trophic effect on gastric epithelial cells, its involvement in human gastric diseases is not clear. We have recently shown that both gastrin and gastric mucosal inflammation enhance Reg gene expression in the fundic mucosa in rats. This study was designed to clarify whether Reg protein is involved in Helicobacter pylori-induced gastritis and whether Reg gene expression is linked to serum gastrin levels in this condition. Mongolian gerbils were inoculated with an H. pylori strain isolated from a gastric cancer patient. Four weeks later, some of the gerbils with H. pylori infection were eradicated by lansoprazole, amoxicillin, and clarithromycin. The time courses of changes in Reg gene expression, serum gastrin levels, gastric acidity, and histopathologic factors were examined. Four weeks after H. pylori infection, gastritis started spreading to the fundic mucosa, and gastric acidity started reducing. Serum gastrin levels and Reg mRNA expression in the fundus were significantly increased 6 weeks after infection. Reg mRNA expression in the fundus correlated significantly with both serum gastrin levels and the severity of fundic mucosal inflammation. After H. pylori eradication, serum gastrin levels and fundic mucosal inflammation were normalized, and the increase in Reg mRNA expression was abolished. The Reg gene is associated with hypergastrinemia and fundic mucosal inflammation and may be involved in H. pylori-induced gastritis.  相似文献   

7.
BACKGROUND: The role(s) of mast cells (MC) in gastric mucosal inflammation caused by Helicobacterpylori is (are) still debated. AIM: To determine whether there is an association between MC density and epithelial cell apoptosis in antral gastric mucosa infected by H pylori. Patients and methods: Biopsy specimens from 122 H pylori-positive subjects with chronic active gastritis, 84 patients with non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug-induced gastritis and 48 volunteers were included. H pylori genotypes were determined by PCR amplification of bacterial cultures. Immunohistochemical analysis was performed on tissue microarrays with anti-CD117, anti-chymase, anti-tryptase, anti-myeloperoxidase, anti-Bcl-2, anti-Bcl-x, anti-Bax and anti-caspase 3 antibodies. RESULTS: Of the 122 patients infected with H pylori, 76 (62.3%) harboured cagA positive strains. H pylori isolates belonged to the vacAs1/m1 genotype in 82 (67%) cases, to the vacAs2/m2 genotype in 23 (18.8%) cases and to the vacAs1/m2 genotype in 17 (13.9%) cases. 61 (50%) H pylori isolates were babA2+. In patients infected with H pylori, the density of MC, and in particular the number of MC-associated epithelial cells, was correlated with a high number of apoptotic epithelial cells. Moreover, the density of MC was correlated with the number of neutrophils infiltrating the antral gastric mucosa, and was strongly increased in patients infected with cagA, vacAs1/m1 and babA2 positive strains. CONCLUSIONS: Taken together, these data show that the density of MC can be considered as a histopathological criterion of gastritis activity in patients infected with H pylori.  相似文献   

8.
Toll-like receptors (TLRs) expressed by mucosal epithelium play an essential role in the defense against microbes by recognizing conserved bacterial molecules. For the first time TLR4, TLR5 and TLR9 have been microanatomically localized in patients with noninflamed gastric mucosa and Helicobacter pylori gastritis by immunohistochemistry. Because polarized expression of TLRs in apical and basolateral epithelial compartments is thought to modulate mucosal immunity, subcellular TLR distribution by gastric epithelium was investigated using confocal microscopy. TLR4, TLR5 and TLR9 were expressed by gastric epithelium in antrum and corpus of all patients with H. pylori gastritis (n = 14) and with noninflamed gastric mucosa (n = 5). TLR4 was expressed at the apical and the basolateral pole of the gastric epithelium as well in noninflamed gastric mucosa as in H. pylori gastritis. TLR5 and TLR9 expression in the noninflamed gastric mucosa was identical to that of TLR4 with localization at the apical and the basolateral epithelial pole. However, in H. pylori gastritis TLR5 and TLR9 expression on the gastric epithelium changed to an exclusive basolateral localization without detectable expression at the apical pole. In the human stomach, the gastric epithelium expressed TLR4, TLR5 and TLR9, which gives it the possibility to interact with H. pylori. Furthermore, gastric epithelial TLR4 expression is highly polarized in an apical and a basolateral compartment, whereas TLR5 and TLR9 polarization seems to be a process dynamically influenced by H. pylori infection. This polarized and dynamically regulated gastric epithelial expression of TLRs supports a sentinel role for these receptors in the mucosal immunity to H. pylori.  相似文献   

9.
Helicobacter pylori is recognised as the most common cause of chronic active gastritis and this bacterium is also an important pathogenic factor in peptic ulcer disease. The biological factors that influence clinical outcome in H. pylori infection have been extensively studied. In addition to immunological factors in the host, bacterial virulence determinants in H. pylori strains are likely to play a crucial role in gastric cancer development. Singlenucleotide polymorphisms at the 5' flanking region of the interleukin (IL)-6 gene promoter (G or C at -174 base) have been identified and individuals with the G allele at position -174 have been shown to produce higher levels of IL-6 than those with the C/C genotype. The mucosal levels of IL-6 were reported to be increased in H. pylori-associated gastritis. The present study was conducted to examine any relationship between inflammatory cytokine polymorphisms and the inflammatory process in mucosa infected by H. pylori. In our study we did not find any association between the C and G alleles in adult patients with chronic gastritis and inflammatory process in gastric mucosa.  相似文献   

10.
Mast cells are known to be effector cells in various inflammatory reactions, but their role in gastritis is unclear. The present study was undertaken to investigate the extent of mast cell involvement in antral gastritis with and without Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) infection and thus evaluate the possible role of mast cells in the pathogenesis of H. pylori-associated gastritis. Antral mucosal biopsies were taken from 212 subjects with symptoms suggestive of acid peptic disease. Sections were assessed for inflammation. Modified Giemsa stain was used to detect H. pylori infection and 1% toluidine blue to count mast cells. Mast cell counts were significantly higher in the antral mucosa even in H. pylori-negative gastritis (68.4 +/- 6.7/mm2), as compared to normal non-inflamed mucosa (45.7 +/- 5.8/mm2) (P < 0.05). However, with H. pylori infection, the mucosal mast cell count were markedly increased (123.8 +/- 4.7/mm2) as compared to normal mucosa (P < 0.01). and H. pylori-negative gastritis (P < 0.01) this increase was noticed uniformly in patients with H. pylori-positivity, irrespective of the presence or absence of a peptic ulcer. After cure of H. pylori infection, the mast cell density decreased significantly (44.9 +/- 4.6/mm2) to reach levels that were similar to those in normal mucosa. There was a positive correlation between the antral mucosal mast cell density and polymorphonuclear and mononuclear cell infiltration (rs = 0.61). H. pylori infection, and 0.73 respy. It was concluded that could be responsible for increasing the mast cell density in the gastric antrum. Probably by inducing castain mucosal cytokine.  相似文献   

11.
Gastric mucosa responds with inflammation to Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) infection. While numerous reports have shown that the immune system produces specific IgG, IgA, and IgM isotype anti H. pylori antibodies, IgE-mediated pathways of H. pylori-associated gastritis are mostly unknown. Our aim was to evaluate whether an increased presence of IgE in the antral gastric mucosa is responsible for the severity of the H. pylori-associated gastritis. The number of IgE-containing cells was estimated in formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded antral gastric biopsy specimens using immunohistochemistry in three groups of patients: (i) 20 H. pylori-positive cases with moderate inflammation, (ii) 19 H. pylori-negative cases with moderate inflammation, and (iii) 19 H. pylori-negative cases with normal mucosa. In chronic gastritis, the number of IgE-positive cells increased significantly as compared to normal mucosa. In gastritic patients, H. pylori positivity was accompanied by a significant accumulation of IgE-positive cells, mainly plasma cells. These data suggest that IgE-mediated immune response probably plays an important role in the development of H. pylori-associated gastritis.  相似文献   

12.
Both polymorphonuclear cell infiltration and increased epithelial apoptosis are seen in gastric mucosa in the presence of Helicobacter pylori infection. This study examined the association between bacterial ability to stimulate an oxidative burst in neutrophils and epithelial apoptosis. Biopsy specimens were obtained from 15 patients to detect apoptotic cells by the TUNEL method. H. pylori strains isolated from corresponding stomach biopsy samples were tested for the ability to stimulate an oxidative burst in human neutrophils. Neutrophils were isolated from healthy subjects without H. pylori infection and the oxidative burst was measured by flow cytometry with dichlorofluorescein diacetate. Stimulation with H. pylori increased both the percentage of activated cells and fluorescence intensity. There was a significant positive correlation between the number of epithelial apoptotic cells and fluorescence intensity. Increased neutrophil oxidative burst stimulated by H. pylori may play a role in enhanced gastric mucosal DNA damage and consequent atrophic gastritis and gastric cancer.  相似文献   

13.
AIM: To investigate the association between Helicobacter pylori infection and serum pepsinogen (PG) 1 and 2 concentrations in various gastroduodenal diseases. METHODS: Serum PG1 and 2 concentrations and antibodies to H pylori were measured by enzyme linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA); gastric mucosal pH was assessed and urease activity in biopsy tissue was determined. A comparison of the ELISA and urease test results permitted division of the cases into positive, false positive, false negative and negative categories for control, gastritis, and ulcer groups. RESULTS: The gastric mucosal pH and serum PG2 in cases positive for H pylori were significantly increased in ulcer and gastritis cases compared with H pylori negative cases. Similar tendencies were observed for the false positive and false negative categories. CONCLUSIONS: A positive ELISA reaction for antibodies and an increased serum PG2 concentration are reliable indicators of H pylori infection.  相似文献   

14.
15.
AIM: To investigate the relation between Helicobacter pylori associated gastroduodenal diseases and lymphoid tissue hyperplasia in the antral mucosa and to pursue its evolution after eradication of H pylori. METHODS: Gastric antral biopsy specimens were obtained from 438 patients with H pylori positive gastroduodenal diseases (185 chronic gastritis, 69 gastric ulcer, and 184 duodenal ulcer) and 50 H pylori negative healthy controls. Lymphoid follicles and aggregates were counted and other pathological features were scored according to the updated Sydney system for classification of chronic gastritis. After a course of anti-H pylori treatment, biopsy specimens were obtained at four to six weeks, 12 months, and 24 months in the chronic gastritis patient group. RESULTS: The total prevalence of lymphoid follicles and aggregates in the biopsies was 79.9% (350 of 438; 95% confidence intervals (CI), 0.76 to 0.84). The prevalence and density of lymphoid follicles and aggregates were significantly different in the various gastroduodenal diseases. The highest prevalence (89.9%; 95% CI, 0.83 to 0.97) and density (0.82) of lymphoid follicles and aggregates occurred in patients with gastric ulcers. The lowest prevalence of lymphoid follicles and aggregates was found in patients with chronic gastritis (74.6%; 95% CI, 0.68 to 0.81), and the lowest density of lymphoid follicles and aggregates (0.56) was seen in patients with duodenal ulcers. The prevalence and density of lymphoid follicles and aggregates correlated strongly with the activity and severity of gastric antral mucosal inflammation. The eradication of H pylori resulted in a decrease in the prevalence and density of lymphoid follicles and aggregates. CONCLUSION: The prevalence and density of lymphoid follicles and aggregates in gastric antral mucosal biopsies correlated closely with H pylori infection.  相似文献   

16.
The gastric mucosal pathogen Helicobacter pylori induces autoantibodies directed against the gastric proton pump H+,K+-ATPase in 20-30% of infected patients. The presence of these autoantibodies is associated with severity of gastritis, increased atrophy, and apoptosis in the corpus mucosa, and patients with these autoantibodies infected with H. pylori display histopathological and clinical features that are similar to those of autoimmune gastritis (AIG). This review will focus on the T helper cell responses, cytokines, and adhesion molecules involved in corpus mucosal atrophy in chronic H. pylori gastritis and in AIG, and the role of H. pylori in the onset of AIG.  相似文献   

17.
Helicobacter mustelae has been cultured from the stomachs of ferrets with chronic gastritis; the lesions in the stomach have many of the same histological features seen in H. pylori gastritis in humans. To determine whether H. mustelae-negative ferrets with normal gastric mucosa were susceptible to colonization and whether gastritis developed after infection, four H. mustelae-negative ferrets treated with cimetidine were inoculated orally on two successive days with 3 ml (1.5 x 10(8) CFU) of H. mustelae; eight age-matched H. mustelae-negative ferrets served as controls. All four ferrets became colonized; H. mustelae persisted through week 24 of the study, as determined by positive gastric culture, tissue urease, and Warthin-Starry staining of gastric tissue. Superficial gastritis developed in the oxyntic gastric mucosa, and a full-thickness gastritis, composed primarily of lymphocytes and plasma cells plus small numbers of neutrophils and eosinophils, was present in the antrum. The inflammation was accompanied by an elevation of immunoglobulin G antibody to H. mustelae. At 4 weeks post-inoculation, the four infected (experimental) ferrets developed an elevated gastric pH (4.0 to 5.2) for 2 weeks. The eight control ferrets did not have gastritis; H. mustelae could not be demonstrated in gastric tissue via culture, nor was there an immune response to the bacteria. In ferrets, H. mustelae readily colonizes the stomach and produces a gastritis, a significant immune response, and, like H. pylori infection in humans, a transient elevated gastric pH after Helicobacter infection.  相似文献   

18.
AIM: Biopsies of the gastric antrum were reviewed over a period of 10 years to determine the prevalence of Helicobacter heilmannii in symptomatic subjects from this geographical area and to relate its presence to distinctive histopathological and immunohistochemical features. METHODS: Biopsies from 7926 symptomatic patients were reviewed. Ten serial sections were stained with haematoxylin and eosin for conventional histology. Another 10 sections were stained with the Gram method for spiral bacteria. When H heilmannii was suspected, 10 additional serial sections were stained with methylene blue to obtain homogeneous colouring. An equal number of sections from patients affected by isolated H heilmannii or H pylori gastritis were analysed by immunohistochemistry to evaluate lymphoid aggregate/mucosal lymphocyte clonality (CD20 and CD3) and tumour necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha) in stromal cells. RESULTS: The prevalence of H heilmannii was 0.1% (eight of 7926), whereas H pylori was present in 60.7% of patients (4813 of 7926). In two of the eight H heilmannii positive patients both helicobacters were found. In all subjects infected by H heilmannii only, distinctive histology (lymphocyte exudation into gastric foveolae) was seen. Lymphoid aggregates, chronic mucosal inflammation with patchy activity, and the absence of epithelial mucus depletion were regular features of H heilmannii gastritis. Immunohistochemistry did not reveal different lymphocyte clonal patterns between H pylori and H heilmannii gastritis: CD20 positive cells were predominant in the centre of aggregates and mucosal infiltrates, whereas CD3 positive cells were prevalent at the periphery of follicles. Only H pylori gastritis showed a significant increase in TNF-alpha positive stromal cells. CONCLUSION: These data suggest that an unusual lymphocyte reaction, with the tendency to invade the foveolar lumen, is a distinctive histopathological aspect of H heilmannii chronic gastritis, although further studies in a larger series are necessary to confirm this fact. Nevertheless, lymphocyte clones do not differ qualitatively from those found in H pylori infection. Moreover, compared with H heilmannii, H pylori provokes a more intense release of TNF-alpha, suggesting that different inflammatory responses exist to these two organisms.  相似文献   

19.
A series of 115 consecutive, non-ulcerous, dyspeptic patients were examined for Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) colonization in the gastric antral and/or body mucosa using Giemsa staining. Findings were correlated with the presence and degree of activity of superficial gastritis, deep gastritis, atrophic gastritis and with the presence of intestinal metaplasia. The prevalence of H. pylori positivity was 61.7%. In 59 of the 71 positive patients (83%), H. pylori was detected in the antrum or in both the antral and oxyntic mucosa. In the remaining 12 positive patients, H. pylori was detected only in the oxyntic mucosa and in all these cases, the antrum showed intestinal metaplasia associated with atrophic gastritis (25%). In both antral and oxyntic mucosa, the activity of the gastritis was significantly correlated with H. pylori colonization. Linear logistic regression analysis showed that in patients with intestinal metaplasia the presence of H. pylori infection was significant in predicting the presence of more extensive intestinal metaplasia after adjusting for age. The prevalence of intestinal metaplasia types II and III was 65.5% in the H. pylori positive and 25% in the H. pylori negative patients. The antral mucosa is thought to be the elective site for H. pylori related histological lesions. At a later stage, H. pylori can be detected only in the oxyntic area while the antral mucosa shows extensive metaplastic or atrophic lesions. We would suggest that H. pylori plays a promotional role in the morphogenesis of intestinal metaplasia.  相似文献   

20.
The purpose of this study is to estimate the prevalence of lymphocyte aggregates (precursor of MALT lymphomas) in gastric mucosal biopsies and to associate gastric lymphoid tissue with the age of patients, Helicobacter-associated gastritis and other gastric mucosal pathology. A consecutive series of gastric mucosal samples from 150 children and 256 adults were assessed for the presence of lymphoid aggregates as well as morphological characteristics, Helicobacter pylori status, signs of gastritis, mucosal atrophy and lymphoepithelial lesions. Fifteen selected samples with prominent lymphoid aggregates and 10 controls were examined immunohistochemically for the immunoglobulins A, G, M, lymphocytes B and T, clonality of B cell population, atypical lymphocytes and Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) antigen. There was an increase of H. pylori infection and mucosal lymphoid aggregates (MALT) rates in parallel with the increasing age of patients noted in the histological assessment of the mucosal samples. A close association of lymphoid aggregates with H. pylori infection and prominent active gastritis was found, but in adults with chronic non-active, particularly atrophic gastritis this association became weaker. No morphological and immunohistochemical signs of MALT lymphoma were present. Lymphoid aggregates in children were larger, with follicles, but less numerous and tended to be located in the intermediate and deeper parts of the gastric mucosa. Immunohistochemical studies showed an increase of IgA, IgM and lymphocytes T in the deeper part of the lamina propria in H. pylori-associated gastritis and lymphocyte T accumulation in the periphery of the lymphoid follicles. No evidence of monoclonality, CD31 positive lymphocytes or EBV antigen was detected. Lymphoid aggregates are related, but not exclusively, to H. pylori infection. Their detection rates achieve a peak in young adults with H. pylori infection. Lymphocytic aggregates are also present in chronic atrophic gastritis without H. pylori infection and may relate to autoimmune inflammatory response to other factors.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号