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Query: UMLS:C0013395 (
dyspepsia
)
4,879
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
This review presents a critical evaluation of the role of Helicobacter pylori eradication in the management of peptic ulcer disease and non-ulcer
dyspepsia
. On current evidence, H. pylori eradication therapy seems likely to emerge as the most rational and cost-effective treatment for
duodenal ulcer
. The role of H. pylori eradication in the treatment of gastric ulcer and non-ulcer
dyspepsia
is unclear and requires further study. The emerging problem of antibiotic resistance in H. pylori is of major clinical importance and a prime cause of treatment failure. There is increasing evidence of a link between H. pylori and gastric cancer but it is premature to recommend large-scale eradication of H. pylori as a valid strategy for the primary prevention of gastric cancer. The search continues for the ideal H. pylori eradication regimen.
...
PMID:Eradication of Helicobacter pylori: therapies and clinical implications. 143 52
Sixty three children with
dyspepsia
(mean age 12 years, range one to 18, M/F 41/22) were Helicobacter pylori positive by histology of gastric antral biopsy specimens and were treated with a six week course of amoxycillin (50 mg/kg) and tinidazole (20 mg/kg). The endoscopic diagnoses were: normal (16), nodular gastritis (19), oesophagitis (four),
duodenal ulcer
(13), and gastric ulcer (11). H pylori was eradicated in 54 (87%) and histological gastritis resolved in 51 and was improved in the other three. Repeat investigation was offered at six monthly intervals. Reinfection was found in three of 34 (9%) at six months, in none of 22 at 12 months, and in two of 18 (11%) at 18 months, yielding an 18 month cumulative relapse rate of 20%. Children with persisting infection despite treatment remained positive during follow up. Serum H pylori IgG concentrations fell after treatment (p < 0.001), and for individual children during follow up there was a progressive decline, but an increased concentration indicated recurrence. After eradication of H pylori by combined amoxycillin and tinidazole treatment, only a minority of children relapse during the ensuing 18 months.
...
PMID:Eighteen month follow up of Helicobacter pylori positive children treated with amoxycillin and tinidazole. 144 54
The association and causative role of Helicobacter pylori infection of the stomach with gastric ulcer,
duodenal ulcer
, non-ulcer
dyspepsia
, and gastritis has remained controversial. The authors studied the effects of daily intragastric administration of H. pylori suspension in saline (10(8) CFU/ml) and bacteria-free filtrates of saline H. pylori suspensions in 85 Sprague-Dawley rats (weight, 150 to 200 g) with normal mucosa and with surgically produced experimental gastric ulcers. Group I rats (n = 30) with pre-existent experimental gastric ulcers received H. pylori suspension (ATCC 43504, 10(8) CFU/ml); Group II rats (n = 20) with experimental gastric ulcers received bacteria-free H. pylori filtrates; Group III rats with ulcers (n = 20) received saline alone; and Group IV control rats (n = 15) without ulcers received intact H. pylori organisms in suspension (ATCC 43504, 10(8) CFU/ml). At death, ulcer surface areas were measured with a dissecting microscope. Full-thickness sections were obtained for quantitative and qualitative histologic parameters, including the area of remaining mucosal necrosis; characteristics and cellular composition of restored mucosal architectures; and presence or absence of inflammation including counts of neutrophils and lymphocytes. H. pylori organisms were identified within the surface mucus and crypts using routine, special, and immunohistochemical stains. Our results indicate that the continued presence of either intact H. pylori organisms or bacteria-free H. pylori filtrates in the stomachs of rats with pre-existent gastric ulcers resulted in delayed healing of the ulcers and persistence of chronic active inflammation. Daily administration of suspensions of H. pylori organisms to sham-operated rats with intact gastric mucosa, however, resulted in no ulceration or inflammation despite identification of surface H. pylori organisms at death. The authors conclude that H. pylori alone causes little or no effect on an intact gastric mucosa in the rat, that either intact organisms or bacteria-free filtrates cause similar prolongation and delayed healing of pre-existing ulcers with active chronic inflammation, and that the presence of predisposing factors leading to disruption of gastric mucosal integrity may be required for the H. pylori enhancement of inflammation and tissue damage in the stomach.
...
PMID:Helicobacter pylori. Its role in the pathogenesis of peptic ulcer disease in a new animal model. 151 73
This study aimed to compare fasting and postprandial gastrointestinal motor patterns in patients with ulcer and non-ulcer
dyspepsia
. Forty five subjects were studied: 10 with uncomplicated gastric ulcer, eight with uncomplicated
duodenal ulcer
, 18 with chronic idiopathic
dyspepsia
, and nine healthy asymptomatic controls. Gastrointestinal fasting and postprandial motor patterns were recorded using a low compliance perfusion technique. The interdigestive antral cumulative motility index, computed for 30 minutes before the appearance of duodenal activity fronts, and the number of activity fronts with an antral component were significantly less in patients with ulcers and those with non-ulcer
dyspepsia
compared with asymptomatic controls. The patient groups also had a reduced antral motor response to a solid-liquid test meal compared with healthy controls. Intestinal motor abnormalities (bursts of non-propagated phasic pressure activity and discrete clustered contractions) were recorded in a minority of patients, all with associated irritable bowel symptoms. In conclusion, antral hypomotility is a frequent but nonspecific motor abnormality in
dyspepsia
; abnormal motor patterns of the small bowel are less frequent and seem to be confined to patients with concomitant irritable bowel syndrome.
...
PMID:Fasting and postprandial gastrointestinal motility in ulcer and non-ulcer dyspepsia. 154 13
Patients with Candida colonization and invasion were studied in 20
duodenal ulcer
(DU) patients, 10 non-ulcer
dyspepsia
(NUD) cases and 10 controls with non-gastroenterological disorders. Of 20 DU patients, Candida albicans was cultured from duodenal aspirates of 6 (30%) DU patients and pseudohyphae, indicating invasive form, were present in two (10%) prior to treatment. NUD patients and controls had positive Candida culture in 3 (30%) and 1 (10%) cases respectively; pseudohyphae were found in none. Six DU patients (30%) failed to heal with 4 weeks of cimetidine therapy; all six showed invasion of
duodenal ulcer
mucosa with Candida on histology. The pseudohyphae form of Candida was always found to be associated with non-healing of DU. Candidal invasion is associated with failure to respond to, H2-receptor antagonist therapy.
...
PMID:Cimetidine therapy and duodenal candidiasis: role in healing process. 155 8
The variation in the healing and the relapse rates of peptic ulcer disease has led to the search for other factors in the pathogensis of peptic ulcer disease. Helicobacter pylori is believed to be responsible for these different patterns of healing. The results of a study to detect Helicobacter pylori in Sri Lankan patients having
duodenal ulcer
, gastric ulcer, gastritis and non-ulcer
dyspepsia
are presented in this paper. The method employed was the urease test which detects the urease enzyme of H. pylori in gastric mucosal biopsies taken during upper gastrointestinal endoscopy. There is a high incidence in those with gastritis and duodenitis.
...
PMID:Helicobacter pylori and peptic ulcer disease in Sri Lanka. 158 90
Triple therapy containing tetracycline HCl is currently among the most efficient combination therapies for eradication of Helicobacter pylori. Substitution of doxycycline for tetracycline HCl offers advantages of less frequent dosing and extrarenal excretion. In this study patients with
duodenal ulcer
or non-ulcer
dyspepsia
positive for H. pylori were randomized to either doxycycline or tetracycline HCl triple therapy in conjunction with bismuth subcitrate and metronidazole. Of the 34 patients taking doxycycline, only 22 (65%) achieved H. pylori eradication at the 4-week rebiopsy, compared with 36 of 39 (92%) taking tetracycline HCl (p = 0.004). We conclude that doxycycline-containing triple therapy is less effective for H. pylori eradication and offers no clinical advantage over tetracycline HCl-containing triple therapy.
...
PMID:Helicobacter pylori eradication with doxycycline-metronidazole-bismuth subcitrate triple therapy. 158 5
Helicobacter pylori colonization and the incidence, severity, activity and topography of gastritis were investigated systematically in antrum and corpus mucosal biopsies of 1177 subjects undergoing endoscopy in the absence of gastric complaints (asymptomatic, 49) or for non-ulcer
dyspepsia
(NUD; 631 patients, 72 of whom had gastric and/or duodenal erosions), active gastric ulcer (GU, 76 patients), active
duodenal ulcer
(DU, 138 patients), and healed gastric (HGU, 39 cases) or
duodenal ulcer
(HDU, 230 cases). In the antrum, H. pylori colonization and the incidence, severity and activity of gastritis increased progressively in the sequence asymptomatic, erosion-free NUD, erosive NUD, healed ulcer and active ulcer. The same trend was observed in the corpus as regards H. pylori and gastritis incidence, whereas the severity and activity of gastritis were lower in active DU and erosive NUD and higher in active, proximal GU than in the remaining patients. Active DU and erosive NUD showed the highest incidence of non-atrophic gastritis and lowest type-A or AB atrophic gastritis, while active GU had lowest normal mucosa or type-A gastritis and highest type-B atrophic gastritis. In conclusion, H. pylori colonization and gastritis incidence, severity and, especially, activity of the antrum might all contribute to mucosal erosion and ulceration, whereas the same factors, at least in part and with the exception of proximal GU, seem to have a preventive role when affecting corpus mucosa.
...
PMID:Helicobacter colonization and histopathological profile of chronic gastritis in patients with or without dyspepsia, mucosal erosion and peptic ulcer: a morphological approach to the study of ulcerogenesis in man. 160 9
Pain site and radiation and the effect of various foods were studied prospectively in a consecutive series of patients with chronic upper abdominal pain. Patients followed for less than one year were excluded unless peptic ulcer or abdominal malignancy had been diagnosed or laparotomy had been carried out. A total of 632 patients were eligible for the first study and 431 for the second. Gastric ulcer pain was more likely to be left hypochondrial (17%) compared with pain from
duodenal ulcer
(4%) or from all other conditions (5%). It was less likely to be epigastric (54%) compared with
duodenal ulcer
pain (75%). Oesophageal pain was more likely to be both retrosternal and epigastric (25%) compared with non-oesophageal pain (2%). Radiation to the back was more common in peptic ulcer (31%) and biliary pain (35%) compared with functional pain (20%). Pain precipitation by fatty foods was commoner in biliary disease (40%) than in
duodenal ulcer
(11%), peptic ulcer (9%), or non-ulcer
dyspepsia
(19%). Orange, alcohol, and coffee precipitated pain more frequently in
duodenal ulcer
(41%, 50%, and 43% respectively) than in biliary disease (17%, 0%, and 14% respectively). Chilli precipitated pain in one quarter to one half of subjects regardless of diagnosis. Approximately one tenth of all subjects avoided chilli, curry, coffee, and tea because of medical or other advice.
...
PMID:Chronic upper abdominal pain: site and radiation in various structural and functional disorders and the effect of various foods. 162 52
Although Helicobacter pylori is both a frequent cause of gastritis and an important factor in
duodenal ulcer
recurrence, no treatment regimen exists that is completely safe and effective. We have studied a short eradication regimen of tripotassium dicitrato bismuthate 120 mg four times daily and amoxycillin 500 mg four times daily for seven days with metronidazole 400 mg five times daily for three days (days 5-7). 106 patients with peptic ulceration and non-ulcer
dyspepsia
, who were also infected with H pylori, were entered into the study. H pylori was successfully eradicated in 76/106 (72%) patients (median follow-up 9.3 months). The rate of eradication was higher among patients with metronidazole-sensitive H pylori (40/43, 93%). In 17/30 patients in whom eradication failed, pretreatment metronidazole-resistant strains were subsequently isolated. Side-effects were mild, the commonest (24/106, 24%) being taste disturbance with metronidazole. A one-week eradication regimen is a safe, effective, cheap, and well-tolerated treatment for metronidazole-sensitive H pylori.
...
PMID:One week eradication regimen for Helicobacter pylori. 134 68
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