Prospective comparative study of the influence of postoperative bile reflux on gastric mucosal histology and Campylobacter pylori infection.

1989 
Biopsies of 17 peptic ulcer patients, randomly treated by partial gastrectomy with either Billroth-II (n = 9) or Roux-en-Y (n = 8) anastomosis were studied before and six months after surgery to determine the role of bile reflux in the early postoperative histological alterations of the gastric mucosa. After BII-gastrectomy bile acid reflux (median 16.1 mumol/h) was significantly higher (p less than 0.0001) than after RY-gastrectomy (0.1 mumol/h). Campylobacter pylori was present in the preoperative biopsies of all 17 patients. After RY-gastrectomy biopsies of all eight patients were positive for Campylobacter pylori, but was detected in only five of the nine patients with BII-gastrectomy. Preoperative scores of gastritis grading were similar in both groups and no significant differences were found postoperatively. Gastritis scores of the anastomotic mucosa in patients with BII-gastrectomy were significantly higher (p less than 0.02) than in the RY-gastrectomy group. Moreover, the reflux gastritis score in the four BII-gastrectomy patients cleared from Campylobacter pylori was significantly higher (p less than 0.02) than in the postgastrectomy patients harbouring Campylobacter pylori. The results suggest that reflux gastritis and Campylobacter pylori related gastritis are distinct microscopic entities and that bile reflux may play a role in the eradication of Campylobacter pylori after gastrectomy.
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