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Query: UMLS:C0013395 (
dyspepsia
)
4,879
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Helicobacter pylori attracted widespread interest from gastroenterologists because of its potential aetiologic role in disorders of the upper gastrointestinal tract. Based on extensive microbiological studies, Campylobacter pylori was renamed Helicobacter pylori, and the organism represents a new genus of bacteria. It is generally accepted that H. pylori causes chronic, non-specific gastritis (type B gastritis). The inflammatory response occurs even though the bacterium does not penetrate the gastric epithelium; it is found on the surface of and adjacent to the epithelium. The clinical significance of histological gastritis is unknown. The bacterium is often found in asymptomatic subjects. In Caucasian adults, the prevalence of infection increases with increasing age. Higher rates of infection are found in blacks and Hispanics than would be expected for their age. Whether these different rates are the result of racial or socioeconomic factors is not known. It is theorized, but not proven, that high rates of infection with H. pylori at an early age may explain the high incidence of gastric
carcinoma
found in Hispanic populations. H. pylori is found in almost every patient with duodenal ulcer disease, although no direct evidence for a causal relationship exists. Indirect evidence is based on the findings that if H. pylori infection is eradicated, ulcer recurrence is less likely (up to one year of follow-up). A small percentage of patients have a relapse despite eradication of the organism, suggesting a role for other factors in duodenal ulcer disease. The role of H. pylori in gastric ulcer disease is unknown. Seventy to eighty per cent of patients with gastric ulcer have evidence of H. pylori infection, and preliminary data seem to support the existence of two distinct aetiologic groups: those with gastric ulcers related to H. pylori infection and those with gastric ulcers related to use of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs. The role of H. pylori in non-ulcer
dyspepsia
is unknown. Some clinicians believe that H. pylori causes non-ulcer
dyspepsia
and treat these patients for H. pylori infection. However, the data supporting this practice are poor. Treatment is only recommended for patients with resistant duodenal ulcers and patients who have frequent relapses of duodenal ulcers and who are willing to take triple-drug therapy (bismuth compounds, metronidazole, tetracycline) for the infection. As 95% of patients with duodenal ulcer have evidence of H. pylori infection, there is probably little need to confirm the diagnosis of H. pylori infection.
...
PMID:Helicobacter pylori: review of research findings. 188 32
Histologically proven gastric
carcinoma
was studied to establish the incidence and pattern of the disease in the Indian population of Durban. The incidence in this population was found to be low, 6.9/100,000/year. Over a 7-year period (1980-1986) 115 patients were treated for gastric
carcinoma
at R. K. Khan Hospital. There was a male preponderance, and the average age at presentation was 56 years. The commonest presenting symptoms were
dyspepsia
and vomiting, and the majority of patients presented with advanced disease. Only a third underwent resection, a third had no treatment, and a third underwent palliative bypass or laparotomy only. The majority of patients who had a palliative bypass or no treatment died within 9 months. The 5-year survival rate for patients undergoing curative resection was 38% and for palliative resection 9%. To improve survival, emphasis must be on early diagnosis and it is recommended that any patient with
dyspepsia
who is over the age of 30 years should have an endoscopic investigation.
...
PMID:Gastric carcinoma in Durban's Indian population. 198 89
In the United States, early diagnosis and cure of gastric
carcinoma
remain elusive. Patients with this disease commonly have gastrointestinal symptoms that often go unexplained. Physicians give gastric
carcinoma
a low priority in their differential diagnosis and are unaware of the risk factors patients may have. Patients may have a normal upper gastrointestinal series, and fiberoptic gastroscopy is delayed. Patients with unexplained
indigestion
and abdominal pain, coupled with such risk factors for gastric
carcinoma
as national origin, diet, heredity, and previous subtotal gastrectomy for gastric ulcers, should be given the opportunity of esophagogastroduodenoscopy.
...
PMID:Adenocarcinoma of the stomach: a plea for early diagnosis. 205 57
A retrospective study was performed on gastric carcinomas to establish the prevalence of Helicobacter pylori infection in gastric epithelium adjacent to the tumour. A total of 105 carcinomas were studied. The overall prevalence of Helicobacter pylori infection was 59%. The prevalence in different age cohorts from patients with gastric
carcinoma
was compared with that in patients suffering from non-ulcer
dyspepsia
and, based on serological testing, with that in healthy blood donors. The presence of Helicobacter pylori in cancer patients aged 41-50 and 51-60 was significantly higher than in blood donors. No difference was seen in comparison with non-ulcer
dyspepsia
patients. The presence of Helicobacter pylori showed an inverse correlation with the extent of intestinal metaplasia. The intestinal type of
carcinoma
was associated with a higher bacterial load than the diffuse type. These data suggest that the presence of Helicobacter pylori in gastric mucosa could play a role in the pathogenesis of gastric
carcinoma
, especially in the young age group.
...
PMID:Helicobacter pylori and gastric carcinoma. 179 61
Helicobacter pylori (formerly, Campylobacter pylori) is a gram-negative, spiral-shaped bacterium with a strong affinity for gastric-type epithelium. Convincing evidence indicates that H. pylori plays an etiologic role in the development of chronic, nonspecific gastritis, and it may play an important role in the pathogenesis of duodenal ulcer disease. An etiologic role for this organism in chronic gastric ulceration, nonulcer
dyspepsia
, and gastric
carcinoma
is not established. Whereas the diagnosis of H. pylori infection is relatively straightforward, the questions of when and how to treat the infection do not have established answers. A high rate of recrudescence follows most currently used therapeutic interventions. Until the pathogenicity of H. pylori in clinical disease is further supported and additional treatment trials have been completed, a conservative management approach is recommended.
...
PMID:Helicobacter pylori: controversies and an approach to management. 217 47
In the study of a group of 178 unselected patients (105 men, 73 women, mean age 44.5 years), from a population at high risk for gastric
carcinoma
, who presented with chronic
dyspepsia
, a minimum of 8 gastric and oesophageal biopsy specimens were taken during upper gastro-intestinal endoscopy, and examined histologically and histochemically for the presence of Campylobacter pylori and other pathological lesions. Gastric colonisation by C. pylori was found in 75% of men and 68.4% of women. In 90% of patients with duodenal or gastric ulcer and in 71.6% of patients with non-ulcer and non-cancer
dyspepsia
there was a moderate or severe degree of bacterial colonisation. Association between C. pylori colonisation and microscopic evidence of type B gastritis, gastric or duodenal ulcer, gastric cancer, oesophagitis and oesophageal glycogenic acanthosis was found.
...
PMID:The association of Campylobacter pylori with mucosal pathological changes in a population at risk for gastric cancer. 247 Jan 57
Nineteen patients with colorectal adenocarcinoma, three with cholangiocarcinoma, two with hepatocellular carcinoma, and one with carcinoid were treated with hepatic artery infusion chemotherapy. An implantable pump system was used to deliver floxuridine (FUdR), starting at 400 mg for 2 weeks with 2 weeks of rest. Eleven of 15 (73%) measurable patients with colorectal
carcinoma
responded. Of 6 complete responses, 4 were documented by laparotomy, including 1 with cholangiocarcinoma. Toxicity included
dyspepsia
and elevated liver function tests in all patients, gastric ulcer in 2, cholecystitis in 2, and sclerosing cholangitis in 3. Overall median survival for the colon cancer patients has not been reached at 16 months. Regional disease was controlled in the majority of patients treated with this regimen with acceptable toxicity and good quality of life.
...
PMID:Hepatic perfusion with FUdR utilizing an implantable system in patients with liver primary cancer or metastatic cancer confined to the liver. 254 47
Two hundred and fifty cases of biliary tract disease were studied as regards case history, physical and laboratory investigations, surgery and follow-up. It was found that females especially multipara were frequently affected; majority of cases were in 3rd to 5th decade of their life, rise in age showing decline in incidence. Majority of cases (82.4%) were vegetarians and had used vegetable fats (oriental diet). Most of the cases (98.8%) belonged to middle and poor class and were lean and thin. Pain in the right upper quadrant of the anterior abdominal wall had been the commonest symptom, in about half the cases it got aggravated by fatty meals. A mass was felt in the right hypochondrium in 29.6% and Murphy's sign was positive in 55.5% of cases. Radio-opaque calculi were present in 8% of cases, in another 10.8% the calculi were demonstrated by oral cholecystography, radiography could detect calculi in 47 (25.4%) cases and its overall diagnostic success rate has been low (56.8%). Ultrasonography proved more valuable tool for diagnosis; bile culture was positive in 8.8% of cases only for Esch coli, proteus, klebsiella, staphylococci or paracolon. Right subcostal incision gave the best results. Chronic cholecystitis with cholelithiasis (74%) was more common than acalculus cholecystitis (26%), incidence of
carcinoma
was 2.8%, and in 5 out of 7 cases malignancy was associated with cholelithiasis. Early diagnosis and cholecystectomy for gallstones can prevent malignancy. Surgery on the whole proved beneficial and it can be more rewarding if pre-operatively other causes of
dyspepsia
are either excluded or confirmed. Excluding cases of malignancy, the mortality has been quite low and thus acceptable.
...
PMID:Gall bladder disease: an analytical report of 250 cases. 263
Twenty-five patients with carcinoma of the esophagus (group I) and 25 patients suffering from non-ulcer
dyspepsia
with normal endoscopy (group II) were studied to know the incidence of isolation of Candida from their esophagus. Endoscopic brushings were taken from the esophagus in both groups and studied by smear examination and culture. Fungal organisms could be detected in 75% of cases of group I and 32% of cases of group II by culture techniques, and 45.8% and 12% respectively by smear examination. The difference was statistically significant (p less than 0.05) for both the techniques. Candida albicans was the commonest species isolated. No correlation was found between Candida agglutination titres and density of Candida growth on culture. We conclude that an association exists between
carcinoma
esophagus and the occurrence of Candida in the esophagus.
...
PMID:Association of Candida with carcinoma of esophagus. 259 76
A study was carried out on 41 cases of early gastric cancer over a five year period (1983-1987) based on resected stomach specimens. Males (29) outnumbered females (12) by 2.4:1. Mean age was 63 years (Range 30-80 years), and there was an overwhelming Chinese preponderance (40, 97.6%). The indications for endoscopy were:
dyspepsia
(24, 58.5%), gastro-intestinal bleeding (14, 34.1%) and follow up of megaloblastic anaemia (3, 7.4%). The diagnosis of malignancy was unsuspected at endoscopy in 38 patients and the commonest finding was a chronic ulcer (35, 85.4%). Most of the lesions were located in the body (24, 58.5%) and along the lesser curvature (36, 87.8%). Depressed lesions (Type III and combined IIc + III) were the commonest macroscopic lesions. Intestinal type
carcinoma
was the commonest microscopic type (34, 82.9%). Submucosal infiltration was present in 19 (47.3%) and lymph node metastases in 4 (9.8%). There was only one death from carcinoma of the stomach (mortality 2.4%).
...
PMID:Early gastric cancer in Singapore. 271 21
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