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    Vacuolating cytotoxin production by Helicobacter pylori isolates from peptic ulcer, atrophic gastritis and gastric carcinoma patients.
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    Abstract:
    We investigated the production of vacuolating cytotoxin by Helicobacter pylori isolates from patients with peptic ulcer, atrophic gastritis or gastric carcinoma in order to examine the pathophysiological significance of vacuolating cytotoxin in these diseases.H. pylori was isolated from 18 patients (five with peptic ulcers, seven with atrophic gastritis and six with gastric carcinoma). Culture supernatants of H. pylori isolates, concentrated 20-fold, were serially diluted and then analyzed for cytotoxin activity semi-quantitatively using A431 cells as indicator cells. The relative activity of vacuolating cytotoxin was defined according to the maximum dilution.Cytotoxin production was observed in two out of five, six out of seven and six out of six isolates from peptic ulcer, atrophic gastritis and gastric carcinoma patients, respectively. The mean relative activity was calculated as 0.80, 2.71 and 2.50 inThese results suggest that vacuolating cytotoxin-producing H. pylori is strongly associated with both atrophic gastritis and gastric carcinoma.
    Keywords:
    Atrophic gastritis
    Peptic
    Spirillaceae
    We conducted a longitudinal cohort study to determine the association of Helicobacter pylori infection and the progression of chronic atrophic gastritis (CAG) with gastric cancer. A cohort of 4655 healthy asymptomatic subjects was followed for a mean period of 7.7 years. H. pylori infection was established by serum specific antibodies and the presence of CAG was confirmed by serum pepsinogen. During the follow-up period, 45 gastric cancer cases were detected (incidence rate, 126/100000 person-years). A univariate analysis after adjustment for age showed that both H. pylori and CAG were significantly associated with gastric cancer. To clarify the interaction between H. pylori and CAG, an analysis stratified by H. pylori- and CAG-status was performed. No cancer developed in the H. pylori(-)/CAG(-) group during the study period. This supports the theory that it is quite rare for any type of gastric cancer to develop in an H. pylori-free healthy stomach. With the progression of H. pylori-induced gastritis, the risk of gastric cancer increased in a stepwise fashion from CAG-free gastritis [H. pylori(+)/CAG(-) group] (HR=7.13, 95%CI=0.95-53.33) to CAG [H. pylori(+)/CAG(+) group] (HR=14.85, 95%CI=1.96-107.7) and finally to severe CAG with extensive intestinal metaplasia [H. pylori(-)/CAG(+) group] (HR=61.85, 95%CI=5.6-682.64) in which loss of H. pylori from the stomach is observed. Therefore, it is probable that H. pylori alone is not directly associated with stomach carcinogenesis. Instead, H. pylori appears to influence stomach carcinogenesis through the development of CAG. The observed positive correlation between the extent of H. pylori-induced gastritis and the development of cancer was strong, especially for the intestinal type. These results are compelling evidence that severe gastritis with extensive intestinal metaplasia is a major risk factor for gastric cancer, and they confirm the previously described model of stomach carcinogenesis: the gastritis-metaplasia-carcinoma sequence.
    Atrophic gastritis
    Intestinal metaplasia
    Stomach cancer
    Chronic gastritis
    Univariate analysis
    Spirillaceae
    Citations (506)
    Hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) is increasingly recognized for its role in a variety of hepatic and systemic diseases. Its relationship to gastritis has not been studied. We aimed at measuring gastric mucosal HGF levels in the presence or absence of Helicobacter pylori gastritis, in peptic ulcers, and in response to H. pylori eradication.Fifty one patients were studied. Patients were not entered if they had liver disease, malignancy, or any systemic illness. HGF was measured in gastric antral incubates using an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. Assessments were repeated 6 wk after a 2-wk course of anti-H. pylori triple therapy in 12 patients. Code numbers were used for blinding.The median gastric mucosal HGF level was 36 ng/gm/tissue in patients with H. pylori gastritis (n = 33) compared with 19 ng/gm in 18 negative controls (p = 0.0024), 18 ng/gm after the eradication of H. pylori (p = 0.021), 23 ng/gm in all patients with ulcers (n = 10), and 26 ng/gm/tissue in H. pylori-positive ulcers (n = 7).Gastric mucosal HGF levels were elevated in H. pylori gastritis and reduced by its eradication. These results are relevant to our understanding of the increased gastric cell proliferation in patients with H. pylori-related gastritis.
    Peptic
    Spirillaceae
    Atrophic gastritis
    Citations (17)
    The aim of this study was to elucidate the prevalence of Helicobacter pylori and its distribution in order to clarify the frequency of H. pylori infection and the most appropriate site of endoscopic biopsy for studies of H. pylori infection associated with different gastric diseases.Swiss role mucosal strips from 275 resected stomachs, which included the greater curvature, anterior wall and lesser curvature of the antrum, incisura and corpus, were stained with haematoxylin-eosin and H. pylori antibody.The prevalence of H. pylori infection was 97% in duodenal ulcers, 98% in gastric ulcers, 98% in intestinal-type carcinomas and 99% in diffuse-type carcinomas. H. pylori was present at a rate of 100% in any site in cases of duodenal ulcer, but was diffusely distributed in the antrum and patchily distributed in the corpus. The detection rate of H. pylori was 50-100% in gastric ulcers, 30-100% in intestinal-type adenocarcinomas and 63-100% in diffuse-type adenocarcinomas depending on the site of the stomach examined.The prevalence of H. pylori infection was very high in peptic ulcers of the duodenum and stomach and gastric carcinomas of Japanese patients. Biopsy specimens for evaluation of H. pylori infection should be taken routinely from both the greater curvature of the antrum and corpus. Immunohistochemical staining should be used to assay for H. pylori when few organisms are present or eradication therapy has been used.
    Spirillaceae
    Pyloric Antrum
    Peptic
    We investigated the production of vacuolating cytotoxin by Helicobacter pylori isolates from patients with peptic ulcer, atrophic gastritis or gastric carcinoma in order to examine the pathophysiological significance of vacuolating cytotoxin in these diseases.H. pylori was isolated from 18 patients (five with peptic ulcers, seven with atrophic gastritis and six with gastric carcinoma). Culture supernatants of H. pylori isolates, concentrated 20-fold, were serially diluted and then analyzed for cytotoxin activity semi-quantitatively using A431 cells as indicator cells. The relative activity of vacuolating cytotoxin was defined according to the maximum dilution.Cytotoxin production was observed in two out of five, six out of seven and six out of six isolates from peptic ulcer, atrophic gastritis and gastric carcinoma patients, respectively. The mean relative activity was calculated as 0.80, 2.71 and 2.50 inThese results suggest that vacuolating cytotoxin-producing H. pylori is strongly associated with both atrophic gastritis and gastric carcinoma.
    Atrophic gastritis
    Peptic
    Spirillaceae
    Citations (12)
    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.
    Atrophic gastritis
    Peptic
    Helicobacter
    Citations (2)
    Intramucosal peptic activity may participate in the genesis of acute and chronic superficial gastritis. The proteolytic activity of homogenates of gastric mucosa (antrum and body) and duodenum were measured at pH 2.0 (total peptic activity) after exposure to pH 8.0 (pepsinogen) and the activated pepsinogen (pepsin) was calculated in pediatric patients investigated for the presence of Helicobacter pylori (H pylori), 122 antral, 77 stomach body, and 74 duodenal biopsies were examined in 43 H pylori positive patients, 51 controls, and 28 H pylori negative gastritis patients. Activated pepsinogen was significantly reduced in the stomach of H pylori positive patients only. Pepsinogen values were similar in all the anatomical areas tested in all patients. In 13 H pylori positive patients reinvestigated three months after antibiotic therapy, antral mucosal activated pepsinogen activity increased significantly (mean pretreatment 1.56 (1.0) U/mg protein versus mean post-treatment 2.72 (1.7) U/mg protein) and reached values comparable with controls. The decreased activated pepsinogen activity in association with normal pepsinogen content observed in the antrum of H pylori positive gastritis patients indicate local pepsin inactivation or alternately enhanced removal into the gastric lumen or backflow into the circulation.
    Pepsin
    Chronic gastritis
    Peptic
    Spirillaceae
    Citations (12)
    We compared the prevalence rates of peptic ulcer (duodenal and gastric) and gastric cancer in 1,796 dyspeptic Peruvian patients with those reported in 2,883 similar patients from developed countries. The prevalence of total peptic ulcer was significantly lower, and that of gastric cancer significantly higher, in the Peruvian patients. The prevalence of gastric ulcer was lower but not significantly so. We deduced that the significantly lower prevalence of total peptic ulcer was directly related to the low prevalence rate of duodenal ulcer. We hypothesize that the reason for these differences was probably a higher prevalence of Helicobacter pylori-associated chronic atrophic gastritis with hypochlorhydria in the Peruvian patients. Hypochlorhydria decreases the predisposition to peptic ulcer (especially duodenal ulcer), and chronic atrophic gastritis may predispose an individual to gastric cancer.
    Atrophic gastritis
    Peptic
    Chronic gastritis
    Prevalence
    Spirillaceae