Prevalence of Helicobacter pylori in non-ulcer dyspepsia.
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Abstract:
Dyspepsia is a poorly understood term that is used to describe symptoms that originate in the upper gastrointestinal tract. There is increasing evidence that Helicobacter pylori infection plays an aetiological role in some forms of dyspepsia. H. pylori infection is more common in dyspeptic patients than asymptomatic controls. Clinical trials of the benefit of H. pylori eradication therapy in non-ulcer dyspepsia have given conflicting results. This may be due to methodological flaws in the studies to date. Trials in non-ulcer dyspepsia may have several end-points. Future studies should be long-term, placebo-controlled, double-blind, and use a validated symptom questionnaire. Acid secretion studies demonstrate acid hypersecretion in non-ulcer dyspepsia that is intermediate between that seen in duodenal ulcers and asymptomatic carriers. This suggests that H. pylori gastritis represents a spectrum of disease that includes duodenal ulceration, whose natural history is one of relapses and remissions, and non-ulcer dyspepsia.Keywords:
Etiology
Spirillaceae
Helicobacter
Duodenitis
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Dyspepsia is a poorly understood term that is used to describe symptoms that originate in the upper gastrointestinal tract. There is increasing evidence that Helicobacter pylori infection plays an aetiological role in some forms of dyspepsia. H. pylori infection is more common in dyspeptic patients than asymptomatic controls. Clinical trials of the benefit of H. pylori eradication therapy in non-ulcer dyspepsia have given conflicting results. This may be due to methodological flaws in the studies to date. Trials in non-ulcer dyspepsia may have several end-points. Future studies should be long-term, placebo-controlled, double-blind, and use a validated symptom questionnaire. Acid secretion studies demonstrate acid hypersecretion in non-ulcer dyspepsia that is intermediate between that seen in duodenal ulcers and asymptomatic carriers. This suggests that H. pylori gastritis represents a spectrum of disease that includes duodenal ulceration, whose natural history is one of relapses and remissions, and non-ulcer dyspepsia.
Etiology
Spirillaceae
Helicobacter
Duodenitis
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Citations (35)
The isolation of Helicobacter pylori from human gastric mucosa by Warren and Marshall in 1984, has given new approaches in etiology of peptic ulceration. Approximately all of duodenal ulcer patients have displayed antral gastritis with Helicobacter pylori, made strong suspicion of the bacteria in the etiology of duodenal ulcer. In therapy, combination of antibiotics to acid suppressive therapy should be preferred to antibiotics only.
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Helicobacter
Peptic
Antibiotic Therapy
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This study aimed to determine the importance of raised antibodies to Helicobacter pylori in an asymptomatic population. A total of 128 asymptomatic blood donors who were seropositive for H pylori and consented to endoscopy were investigated. These subjects were from a population of 1010 blood donors screened for antibodies to H pylori. A questionnaire was completed to determine if any subjects had complained of symptoms, and they subsequently had endoscopy. Altogether 121 of 128 were positive for H pylori by histology and urease test and/or culture and all 121 had chronic active gastritis on histology. Twenty five of these subjects had peptic ulcer (20 duodenal, five gastric), a further 21 had erosive duodenitis, and two were found to have gastric cancer. H pylori associated peptic ulcer disease and duodenitis occur more frequently than previously recognised and this suggests that H pylori infection, even if asymptomatic, is of far greater clinical relevance than originally thought.
Duodenitis
Rapid urease test
Chronic gastritis
Spirillaceae
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In a placebo controlled prospective clinical trial of bismuth salicylate in helicobacter pylori associated gastritis, 52 adult patients were randomly allocated to treatment with bismuth salicylate or placebo. Helicobacter pylori were totally cleared in 77% patients in bismuth group but none in placebo group (P less than 0.001). Resolution of gastritis (P less than 0.001) and improvement of symptoms (P less than 0.01) were significantly better in patients where H. pylori infection cleared as compared to patients where the infection persisted.
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Helicobacter
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The prevalence of Helicobacter pylori infection was studied in 152 subjects with a normal upper gastrointestinal endoscopy, 125 with duodenal ulcer, 25 with gastric ulcer, 46 with erosive gastritis and 9 with erosive duodenitis. Two biopsies from duodenum, antrum and fundus were obtained from each subject during endoscopy for histological diagnosis and Helicobacter pylori search. None of the patients with normal endoscopy and 2% of patients with duodenal ulcers had Helicobacter pylori in duodenal biopsies. These last patients had a significantly higher frequency of Helicobacter pylori in the antrum (71%) than the rest of the studied groups. Five percent of subjects with normal endoscopy and 5% of those with duodenal ulcers had Helicobacter pylori in the antrum. An active gastritis was demonstrated in almost all patients with Helicobacter infection. Intestinal metaplasia occurred almost exclusively in the absence of Helicobacter pylori infection.
Duodenitis
Helicobacter
Spirillaceae
Intestinal metaplasia
Fundus (uterus)
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This study aimed to determine the prevalence of endoscopic and histological gastroduodenitis as well as helicobacter-like organisms in patients with end stage renal failure undergoing maintenance dialysis treatment. A total of 322 out of 422 patients in our dialysis programme underwent endoscopy and gastroduodenal biopsy specimens were taken from 260. Endoscopic gastroduodenitis occurred in 158 (49%). Histological gastritis occurred in the gastric body or antrum in 134 patients (52%) and duodenitis in 52 (21%). There was no correlation between endoscopic and histological gastritis in contrast to a significant correlation for duodenitis. Helicobacter-like organisms occurred in the body or antrum in 81 (31%). Their presence was associated with gastritis--in particular acute and acute on chronic gastritis rather than chronic gastritis. Patients with gastritis were significantly older than those without (p less than 0.001) and had lower basal and peak acid outputs.
Duodenitis
Helicobacter
Spirillaceae
Basal (medicine)
Chronic gastritis
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Citations (56)
[Campylobacter (Helicobacter) pylori in chronic erosive gastritis, duodenitis and gastroduodenitis].
The presence and degree of manifestation of Campylobacter (Helicobacter) pylori in gastroduodenal mucosa were studied in 100 patients (56 men, mean age 51.4 years, and 44 women, mean age 46.5 years) with endoscopically proved chronic erosive gastritis (52 patients), erosive duodenitis (36 patients) and erosive gastroduodenitis (12 patients). The examinations revealed the presence of Campylobacter (Helicobacter) pylori in mean 77% of the patients with erosive gastritis, duodenitis and gastroduodenitis. Campylobacter (Helicobacter) pylori was found most often in patients with chronic erosive duodenitis--83.3%, whereas in the patients with erosive gastritis it was found in 73.07%. In 83.33% of the patients with chronic erosive gastritis, duodenitis and gastroduodenitis the campylobacter infection was well manifested--(++) according to Le Bodie et al (1987). The results allow the conclusion that one of the important pathogenetic factors of erosive gastritis, duodenitis and gastroduodenitis is the Campylobacter (Helicobacter) pylori infection of gastroduodenal mucosa.
Duodenitis
Chronic gastritis
Helicobacter
Spirillaceae
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Duodenal bulb
Duodenitis
Spirillaceae
Helicobacter
Metaplasia
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We evaluated in children with abdominal complaints the prevalence of Helicobacter pylori gastric and duodenal colonization and the histological features of gastric and duodenal mucosae. Fifty patients, aged 1-17 years, underwent upper endoscopy for recurrent abdominal pain, vomiting and/or gastrointestinal bleeding. With serological, bacteriological and/or histological methods twenty-eight children were demonstrated to be Helicobacter pylori-positive. No statistically significant differences were observed with regard to age, sex and indication to perform endoscopy. Eighty-two percent of Helicobacter pylori-positive patients had gastritis and/or duodenitis. The Helicobacter pylori-positive children had higher Helicobacter pylori specific IgG levels than the Helicobacter pylori-negative ones (p < 0.001). No statistically significant differences were found between Helicobacter pylori-positive and Helicobacter pylori-negative subjects, for gastrin and pepsinogen I. Since the frequency of Helicobacter pylori infection in children with gastrointestinal complaints is high, in patients undergoing upper endoscopy, the sistematical examination of bioptic samples for bacteriological and histologic procedures is of great importance.
Duodenitis
Helicobacter
Spirillaceae
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The aim of this study is to find out the prevalence of Helicobacter pylori infection in patients with nonulcer dyspepsia (NUD) and asymptomatic controls and to see if there is an etiological association between gastritis, NUD and Helicobacter pylori. One hundred thirty six patients with NUD and 71 controls had six endoscopic biopsies from different sites of the gastric mucosa for histological diagnosis. Helicobacter pylori was looked for in all biopsy specimens utilizing half Gram, Giemsa and Gimenez staining techniques. Type B chronic gastritis was detected in 96% of the NUD cases and in 100% of the asymptomatic controls (P > 0.05). Helicobacter pylori was found in 82 (65%) patients with NUD and in 38 (56%) asymptomatic controls (P > 0.05). Type B chronic gastritis is almost universal in both NUD cases and asymptomatic controls. There is no difference in the prevalence of Helicobacter pylori infection between the two groups. The absence of Helicobacter pylori in a significant number of patients (36%) and controls (45%) with gastritis contradicts the etiological association between Helicobacter pylori and gastritis reported by others, suggesting that in Ethiopia there may be a chronic environmental gastritis which may not be helicobacter-related. There is no correlation between NUD and Type B gastritis, and between symptoms and Helicobacter pylori infection in this population.
Etiology
Helicobacter
Chronic gastritis
Spirillaceae
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