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1.
The main aims of the Sydney system for the classification of gastritis are to improve uniformity in histopathological reporting and to provide a flexible matrix of rules for grading the histological features. We sought to determine the level of interobserver agreement between pathologists in the application of the Sydney system. Three histopathologists independently examined H & E, alcian blue/PAS and modified Giemsa stained sections of two antral and two corpus gastric biopsies from 69 consecutive dyspeptic patients. After elimination of five unsuitable cases, each observer graded chronic inflammation, polymorph activity, atrophy, intestinal metaplasia and Helicobacter pylori density in the antrum and corpus on a 0–3 scale according to the Sydney system criteria. The pairwise agreement on final diagnosis and the overall and conditional agreement on histological grades were examined by kappa statistics. Agreement on the final diagnosis ranged from 83–94% with kappa values of 0.699 ('good') to 0.887 ('excellent'). Conditional probability of agreement on a diagnosis of H. pylori positive gastritis was 99%, but wider disagreements were apparent in the recognition of H. pylori negative gastritis, reactive gastritis and even normal biopsies. Overall agreement for grade ranged from 70% for antral atrophy to 94% for intestinal metaplasia in the corpus with 'moderate' or 'good' kappa values. We conclude that the diagnostic and grading criteria described in the Sydney system can be applied consistently by histopathologists. The findings underline its potential usefulness in routine practice.  相似文献   

2.
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   

3.
Previous reports showed Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) in type B gastritis-affected stomachs. This study was carried out to compare H. pylori staining effectiveness on biopsy to brush cytology. Tissue and brush parallel samples of gastric mucosa with abnormal or normal appearances were examined: 57.6% H. pylori-positive pieces from the antrum and 19.2% from the body were found, versus 65.3% and 25% H. pylori-positive brush smears, respectively. H. pylori resembling organisms were mainly related to chronic and acute antral inflammations and were often associated with higher amounts of round-shaped cocco-bacteria. In addition, H. pylori direct stain on brushing is proposed as the most rapid and reliable method for the routine diagnosis of Helicobacter pylori infection, in both ulcer or nonulcer gastritis.  相似文献   

4.
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   

5.
AIM: Our aim was to determine interobserver agreement in the application of the Sydney system to assess reversibility of gastritis after Helicobacter pylori eradication. METHODS AND RESULTS: Forty-three patients with a Helicobacter pylori-positive duodenal ulcer disease were included in the study. All patients included had successful H. pylori eradication after different antimicrobial drug combinations. Biopsy samples were collected from antrum and body, according to the Sydney recommendations, before antimicrobial therapy, 2 months after and at yearly intervals during 2-4 years of follow up. Three pathologists, who were blind to clinical data, evaluated histological changes in 221 antral and 219 body specimens stained with haematoxylin and eosin and with Warthin Starry. The percentage of pairwise agreement, kappa and weighted kappa statistic were used. Agreement in recognizing the presence of H. pylori colonization of the gastric mucosa, activity of inflammation and intestinal metaplasia was over 90%. Agreement in recognizing chronic inflammation in the body and atrophy in the antrum was between 78 and 89% respectively. The kappa values were excellent (more than 0.75) for the grade of H. pylori in the body, good (between 0.50 and 0.75) for the grade of H. pylori in the antrum, grade of inflammatory activity and intestinal metaplasia in the antrum and moderate to good (0.38-0.53) for the grade of chronic inflammation. Kappa values were poor to good (from 0.17 to 0.57) only in evaluation of the grade of atrophy. CONCLUSION: Interobserver agreement in the application of the Sydney system to reversibility of gastritis after H. pylori was good. More strict criteria should be used for atrophy and to differentiate normal and mild chronic inflammation.  相似文献   

6.
Bile reflux and intestinal metaplasia in gastric mucosa.   总被引:19,自引:3,他引:19       下载免费PDF全文
AIM: To determine associations between enterogastric bile reflux and gastric mucosal pathology. METHOD: A retrospective study using fasting gastric juice bile acid measurements and antral or prestomal biopsy specimens from 350 patients, 66 of whom had previously undergone surgery that either bypassed or disrupted the pyloric sphincter. RESULTS: Bile reflux was positively associated with reactive gastritis and negatively with Helicobacter pylori density. After stratification for previous surgery, age, and H pylori status, the histological feature most strongly associated with bile reflux was intestinal metaplasia, including all its subtypes. The prevalence of intestinal metaplasia was greatest in patients with both H pylori infection and high bile acid concentrations. Bile reflux was also positively associated with the severity of glandular atrophy, chronic inflammation, lamina propria oedema and foveolar hyperplasia. CONCLUSIONS: Bile reflux is a cause of reactive gastritis. It modifies the features of H pylori associated chronic gastritis. The changes are not confined to patients who have had surgery to their stomachs. The positive associations with atrophy and intestinal metaplasia have implications for models of gastric carcinogenesis.  相似文献   

7.
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   

8.
AIMS: In the gastric antrum and body, foveolar hyperplasia is a feature of reactive gastritis resulting from--for example, duodenogastric bile reflux and the use of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs). The aim of this study was to examine the occurrence and clinical relevance of gastric cardiac foveolar hyperplasia. METHODS: The study population was drawn from a consecutive series of 1698 patients sent for upper gastrointestinal endoscopy. Only cases without chronic gastritis or Barrett's oesophagus were included. The final study population consisted of 307 patients. RESULTS: Foveolar hyperplasia was seen in the gastric cardiac mucosa in 31 (10%) patients with histologically normal stomach mucosa, but none had endoscopically noticeable hyperplastic polyps. Compared with patients without gastric cardiac hyperplasia, those with hyperplasia more often had chronic inflammation and complete intestinal metaplasia in the junctional biopsies (48% v 77% and 9% v 26%, respectively). Logistic regression analysis revealed that chronic cardiac inflammation (odds ratio (OR), 3.2; 95% confidence interval (CI), 1.3 to 7.8) and intestinal metaplasia of the complete type (OR, 2.8; 95% CI, 1.1 to 7.1) were independent risk factors for cardiac foveolar hyperplasia. In univariate analysis, endoscopic erosive oesophagitis (endoscopy positive gastro-oesophageal reflux disease) and the use of NSAIDs were not related to the presence of foveolar hyperplasia. CONCLUSIONS: Foveolar hyperplasia in the gastric cardiac mucosa occurs in patients with histologically normal non-gastritic stomachs and may develop as a consequence of chronic inflammation limited to the gastro-oesophageal junction ("junctitis"). It is not associated directly with endoscopy positive gastro-oesophageal reflux disease or the use of NSAIDs.  相似文献   

9.
In this article the histological features of acute and chronic gastritis are reviewed. The histopathological gastric biopsy report can now encompass an aetiological, topographical (when antrum and corpus are sampled) and morphological comment on the gastric mucosa. The degree of detail included in the report (e.g. grading of the severity of inflammation, atrophy, density of Helicobacter pylori ) will vary according to local requirement. However, the distinct recognisable patterns of inflammation categorised in the Sydney system provide a common terminology for a succinct diagnosis. The overall condition of the patient's gastric mucosa assigns him/her to one of the H. pylori -positive or negative categories of chronic gastritis. This may not only have relevance to current clinical management, but may be a valuable record if the patient returns with dyspeptic symptoms in the future. For example, duodenal ulcers are unlikely to develop except in patients with antrum predominant H. pylori -associated gastritis. Knowledge of the natural history of different types of gastritis is rapidly evolving, and the biopsy provides a permanent 'snapshot' of the state of the gastric mucosa at the time of the endoscopy.  相似文献   

10.
AIMS--To determine the prevalence of Helicobacter pylori in five main nationality groups with gastric ulcer, duodenal ulcer, and non-ulcer dyspepsia; and to determine the histopathological types of gastritis and assess the graded variables of Helicobacter associated gastritis. METHODS--Gastric antral and corpus biopsy specimens from 437 patients were examined for the prevalence of H pylori, 337 of which were classified and graded histologically according to the Sydney system. RESULTS--The overall colonisation rate of H pylori was 90%, and there was no significant difference between groups of different ethnic origins. The colonisation rates were 99%, 89%, and 78% in patients with duodenal ulcer, non-ulcer dyspepsia, and gastric ulcer, respectively. Helicobacter associated gastritis was the most common form of chronic gastritis (87%). H pylori density was greater in the antrum than the body. Gastric atrophy in helicobacter associated gastritis was seen in 54% of the cases (43% grade I, 10% grade II, 1% grade III) and increased the older the patients. Atrophy of the corpus alone was very rare (1%). Atrophy and intestinal metaplasia were more prevalent in patients with gastric ulcer than duodenal ulcer. CONCLUSION--The colonisation rate of H pylori was similar in the five groups studied and was almost invariably present in gastric biopsy specimens in patients with duodenal ulcer. H pylori associated gastritis was the most common form of gastritis. Atrophy was mainly of low grade and increased the older the patient.  相似文献   

11.
BACKGROUND: Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) is the most frequent aetiological factor of chronic gastritis (CG). The relationship between H. pylori gastritis, gastro-duodenal ulcer and some gastric cancers (adenocarcinoma, gastric MALT lymphoma) has now been proven. AIM: Describe clinical, endoscopical and histological aspects of H. pylori gastritis in C?te d'Ivoire. METHODS: Retrospective analysis of 1960 gastroscopy reports carry out between January 1994 and December 1995. Analysis of clinical and gastric histological results in 137 patients. FINDINGS: Among 137 patients with gastric biopsy, 102 had H. pylori gastritis (68 men, 38 women, mean age: 39.3 years) and 35 had chemical gastritis. Epigastric pain was the most frequent symptom. The mucosa was frequently erythematous or exsudative at endoscopy. Histological anomalies were located in the antrum, the fundus or generalised, respectively in 33.3%, 25.5% and 41.2% of cases. Mild atrophic CG was more frequent in various locations. Gastritis activity was present in 81.4%, intestinal metaplasia in 18.6% and follicular lymphoid hyperplasia in 36.3% of cases. CONCLUSION: Clinical and endoscopical aspects of H. pylori gastritis did not present any particularities. Fundic gastritis without antral localisation was not unusual. This situation could be the result of antibiotic and gastric acid secretion inhibitor treatments.  相似文献   

12.
BACKGROUND/AIMS: Ardabil Province, in northwestern Iran, has the highest rate of gastric (predominantly cardia) adenocarcinoma in Iran. This study aimed to investigate the feasibility of endoscopic screening and to look for associated Helicobacter pylori infection and gastric precancerous lesions. METHODS: One thousand one hundred and five adult volunteers, residents of Ardabil and Meshkinshahr, districts, 40 years old and above were selected and invited by a simple random household canvass in rural and urban locations. Informed consents were obtained and upper gastrointestinal video endoscopy was performed to biopsy all visible lesions and standard sites in the antrum, corpus, and cardia. RESULTS: One thousand and eleven of the invited individuals agreed to participate, including 494 men and 517 women, with a mean (SD) age of 53.32 (10.39) years. Endoscopy was well tolerated by all subjects; 96.7% of antral and 80.7% of cardia mucosal biopsies were satisfactory. The urease test or histology for H pylori was positive in at least 89.2% of subjects. Histological evidence of mucosal atrophy was seen in 39.3% of antral and 21.9% of cardia samples. Chronic gastritis with or without activity, reactive atypia of glandular epithelium, intestinal metaplasia, dysplasia, and cancer were found in 95.1%, 38.0%, 8.7%, 0.2%, and 0.3% of antral and 85.3%, 22.9%, 3.8%, 0.3%, and 0.1% of cardiac biopsies, respectively. CONCLUSION: Endoscopic screening for upper gastrointestinal diseases was feasible and well tolerated in Ardabil, Iran. Most subjects showed H pylori infection. Atrophic gastritis, reactive atypia, and intestinal metaplasia were common in antrum, corpus, and cardia subsites.  相似文献   

13.
Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID) use is a common cause of peptic ulcer. This study investigated the nature, frequency, and topographic distribution of histological abnormalities of the gastric mucosa associated with chronic NSAID use. A set of 3 to 11 mapped gastric biopsy specimens were obtained from 108 chronic users of NSAIDs and 61 controls. Each specimen was graded from 0 to 3 for each of the following features: foveolar hyperplasia, smooth muscle fibers, edema, neutrophils, intestinal metaplasia, eosinophils, mononuclear cells, mucosal hemorrhage, atrophy, and Helicobacter pylori. We found that foveolar hyperplasia, considered one of the characteristic features of chemical gastropathy, was absent in 66% of NSAID users. Foveolar hyperplasia was present in 37 NSAID users (34%) and in 10 controls (18%); prominent smooth muscle fibers were found in 51 NSAID users (47%) and 10 of the controls (16%). Concurrent H pylori gastritis obscured the histopathologic changes of NSAID use. All other parameters, including H pylori infection rate (57% v 51%) were similar in NSAID users and controls. We conclude that the histological features characteristic of NSAID users were present only in a subset of patients. No single histological feature can be used to characterize or diagnose chemical gastropathy and no simple set of diagnostic criteria can be applied for this purpose.  相似文献   

14.
OBJECTIVE: To compare the Helicobacter pylori-associated pathology in gastric biopsies taken from patients living at sea level with those taken from patients living at high altitude. METHODS AND RESULTS: We included 38 patients from a hospital in the Andean city of La Oroya, Peru, located at 3700 m in altitude, and 40 control patients taken from Comas Clinic located in the city of Lima at sea level. Fibrepanendoscopy and multiple biopsies were performed in all the patients followed by histopathological examination. In the antrum, patients from the Andean town had a higher prevalence of glandular lymphoid adherence lesions, active germinal centres, moderate to severe chronic atrophic gastritis, intestinal metaplasia and moderate to severe total deep gland loss, than did patients from the coastal town. Furthermore, the severity of the histological lesions seen in the gastric body and cardia was significantly greater in the high-altitude patients than in those from sea level. CONCLUSION: This study suggests that the severity of H. pylori-associated gastric lesions seen on histopathological examination is greater in patients living at high altitude, the cause of which is most probably multifactorial but nonetheless principally altitude related.  相似文献   

15.
The final diagnosis of granulomatous gastritis is based on morphological findings and clinical and laboratory data. Detailed analysis of the morphological features of the granulomas together with associated mucosal changes could generate more information on aetiology and pathogenesis. Biopsies from 71 patients diagnosed as having granulomatous gastritis were reviewed. Thirty-seven of these patients (52%) had Crohn's disease. In 18 patients (25%) an isolated granulomatous gastritis was diagnosed. In seven patients (10%) the final diagnosis was a foreign body reaction. Of the remaining cases, four (7%) corresponded to tumour-associated granulomas and one case each of sarcoidosis (1%), Whipple's disease (1%) and vasculitis-associated disease (1%). Two cases (3%) were unclassifiable. The granulomas were mainly found in the antrum (64% antrum only, 11% antrum and corpus, 6% transitional mucosa corpus-antrum). Granulomas were usually small. This was particularly true for those found in patients with Crohn's disease. Multiple granulomas were observed in the sarcoidosis, the Whipple's disease and vasculitis-associated cases. A pattern of chronic gastritis with atrophy was present in 95% of the biopsies (68/71 patients). Helicobacter pylori was detected in 92% of the biopsies (64/71 patients).  相似文献   

16.
AIMS: The spectrum of microscopic lesions resulting from the chronic use of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), known as chemical gastritis, remains unclear, and the variable prevalence reported in different studies makes this issue a matter of lively debate. The aim of this study was to evaluate the prevalence and importance of chemical gastritis in patients regularly taking NSAIDs. Owing to the high prevalence of Helicobacter pylori infection, particularly in subjects over 60 years of age, and in view of a possible association with damage, the presence of H pylori infection in the same tissue sample was also determined in all patients. METHODS: One hundred and ninety seven subjects were enrolled, 118 of whom were receiving chronic treatment with NSAIDs and 79 of whom were controls, pair matched for age, sex, and clinical symptoms (ulcer-like dyspepsia or upper digestive tract haemorrhage). Antral biopsies taken during upper gastroduodenal endoscopy were assessed for chemical gastritis according to a modified version of Dixon's score, and for Helicobacter correlated chronic active gastritis, according to the updated Sydney system. RESULTS: Chemical gastritis was identified in 11 patients taking NSAIDs (9%) and in four controls (5%) (p < 0.05). Helicobacter pylori was detected in 53 patients taking NSAIDs (45%) and in 34 controls (43%). Patients taking NSAIDs had a significantly higher number of erosions and ulcers and worse endoscores than controls. The presence of H pylori did not appear to increase histological damage, ulcer prevalence, or haemorrhagic events. CONCLUSIONS: Chemical gastritis is present in a limited number of patients regularly taking NSAIDs, and is not strongly correlated with NSAID induced damage. In many cases of peptic ulcer or upper gastrointestinal bleeding in patients taking NSAIDs, the presence of chemical gastritis or H pylori infection cannot solely account for the development of mucosal damage.  相似文献   

17.
Twenty-four young adult domestic cats from a commercial vendor were found to be infected with Helicobacter pylori. Histopathologic analyses, selected electron microscopy, and urease mapping were performed on mucosal samples collected from the cardias and fundi, bodies, and antra of these cats' stomachs. H. pylori organisms were abundant in all areas of the stomach on the basis of histologic evaluation and urease mapping. H. pylori infection was associated with a moderate to severe lymphofollicular gastritis in 21 of 24 cats (88%). The gastritis was most pronounced in the antral region and consisted mainly of multifocal lymphoplasmacytic follicular infiltrates in the deep mucosa. The severity of gastritis in the antrum corresponded to high numbers of H. pylori there on the basis of the use of the urease assay as an indicator of H. pylori colonization. Ten of 24 cats (42%) also had small to moderate numbers of eosinophils in the gastric mucosa. All 24 cats had gastric lymphoid follicles, with follicles being most prevalent in the antrum. Electron microscopy of gastric tissue revealed numerous H. pylori organisms, some of which were closely adhered to the mucosal epithelium. Human H. pylori gene-specific primers to ureA and ureB amplified products of similar sizes from H. pylori cat isolates. Digestion of the products with restriction enzymes resulted in fragments characteristic of the restriction fragment length polymorphism patterns of H. pylori isolates from humans.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

18.
Gastric biopsy materials of 4074 consecutive Japanese patients undergoing esophagogastroduodenoscopy were reviewed, along with those of 15 patients with Helicobacter heilmannii infection (11, chronic gastritis; four, mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue (MALT) lymphoma). In four patients with H. heilmannii infection, the materials were examined by transmission electronmicroscopy. Urea breath test (three patients) and antibody test (five patients) were performed in patients with H. heilmannii infection. In two patients with MALT lymphoma, H. heilmannii was eradicated. The prevalence of H. heilmannii was 0.1% in the consecutive series. In chronic gastritis, the gastric mucosa was endoscopically normal (13.3%), had erythema (33.3%), or had erosions (53.3%); histologically, it showed no epithelial change, mild mononuclear cell infiltration, and slight and focal neutrophil infiltration; Helicobacter heilmannii was positive with anti-H. pylori antibody, and was detected in the mucous gel layer and in foveolae. In MALT lymphoma, the gastric mucosa was coarsely granular with enlarged mucosal folds without ulcers (two cases), with small ulcers (one case), or with multiple erosions (one case). Urea breath test and antibody test were both negative. Eradication of H. heilmannii resulted in remission of MALT lymphoma. Helicobacter heilmannii infection is therefore uncommon in Japanese adults, but is associated with chronic gastritis and gastric MALT lymphoma.  相似文献   

19.
20.
Dental plaque has been suggested as a reservoir for Helicobacter pylori but the hypothesis that the oral microflora may be a permanent reservoir of H. pylori is still controversial. The aims of this study were to determine the presence of H. pylori DNA in the gastric antrum and dental plaque of a Venezuelan population by PCR and to investigate the relationship between this infection and the oral hygiene index. Thirty-two patients from the Hospital Universitario de Caracas, attending for routine gastroscopy, and 20 asymptomatic subjects (control group) were evaluated. The patients' gingiva and plaque were assessed by the gingival and plaque indices of Sillness and L?e. Supragingival plaque was analysed by a PCR for a specific internal urease gene. Gastric antrum biopsies were taken for histological examination and PCR. H. pylori was detected in antral samples from 24 (75%) of 32 patients, all of whom had chronic gastritis. H. pylori was also detected in dental plaque samples of 12 (37.5%) of the 32 patients. In 7 (58%) of these 12 patients, H. pylori was identified in the gastric biopsy. Seven patients with chronic gastritis carried H. pylori in dental plaque and antral samples. Of these patients, four also had dysplasia and one had metaplasia. Three subjects in the control group were positive by PCR. In the present study there was no correlation between H. pylori infection and dental hygiene, dental caries, periodontal disease or use of dentures. The oral cavity may be a reservoir for H. pylori infection and oral secretions may be an important means of transmission of this micro-organism. H. pylori in dental plaque may represent a risk factor for gastrointestinal re-infection and ulcer relapse after antibiotic therapy.  相似文献   

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