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Helicobacter pylori: ENOUGH TO GIVE ANYONE AN ULCER!
Authors:TS Levine MB BS  AB Price FRCPath
Institution:Department of Cellular Pathology, Northwick Park Hospital, Harrow, Middlesex
Abstract:SUMMARY Since the early 1980s, research into gastritis and peptic ulcer disease has been dominated by Helicobacter pylori. This is a small, Gram-negative spiral bacterium which inhabits the mucus layer that coats the gastric mucosa. Colonisation of the human stomach by this bacterium is worldwide and, in certain continents, virtually ubiquitous. While histological gastritis is always the result, H. pylori-positive individuals are characteristically asymptomatic. Transmission is thought to be via the faecal-oral route and infection, usually acquired in childhood, will persist unless treatment supervenes. H. pylori is the main causative agent of peptic ulceration, but its role in non-ulcer dyspepsia is less clearcut. Recently epidemiological, histological and experimental data have been described linking H. pylori to gastric neoplasia — in particular adenocarcinoma and MALT lymphoma. A variety of treatment modalities exists for the eradication of this bacterium, and for adults the recommended drug therapy is a combination course of tetracycline, bismuth and metronidazole. Currently the new combination of omeprazole and amoxycillin is suggested as second-line treatment after failed triple therapy.
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