Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0013395 (dyspepsia)
4,879 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Lymphocytic gastritis is characterised by an accumulation of lymphocytes in the epithelium of the gastric mucosa. This form accounts for 4.5% of chronic B-gastritis and manifests itself by dyspepsia, anorexia and weight loss. The course is benign, as 12 of 19 patients recovered within 24 to 36 months in Haot's studies. Macroscopically it appears with nodules, erosions, thickened mucosal folds, or diffuse varioliform pattern. The gastric corpus is preferentially involved. The etiology is unknown. Some authors have hypothesized an abnormal immune response to a local antigen, i.e. Campylobacter pylori.
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PMID:[Lymphocytic gastritis]. 225 61

Over a 9-month period, 109 consecutive patients referred from general surgical out-patient clinics for endoscopy were studied. The presenting symptoms, endoscopic diagnosis, clinical history and degree of histological gastritis were determined. The presence of the organism Campylobacter pylori in oesophageal, antral and duodenal biopsies was detected by a combination of culture, histology and fluorescence microscopy. C. pylori was identified in 49.5% of patients by at least one of the methods described. The organism was present only in antral biopsies in patients with both normal and abnormal endoscopies. The presence of C. pylori was significantly associated with the symptom of dyspepsia, and endoscopic diagnosis of peptic ulceration and a greater degree of histological gastritis. Analysis of the clinical history of the patients with a normal endoscopy suggests that a proportion of these patients (7 of 20) had previous evidence of peptic ulceration. Treatment with H2-receptor antagonists may heal ulceration but fails to eradicate C. pylori.
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PMID:Incidence of Campylobacter pylori in a consecutive series of surgical patients referred for endoscopy. 177 18

Two hundred consecutive patients suffering from non-ulcer dyspepsia were studied for the presence of Helicobacter pylori in antral gastritis and normal antral mucosa, using the combination of culture, modified Giemsa stain and a sensitive immunoperoxidase stain as means of detection. H. pylori gastritis was present in 56% of the cases. The bacterium was present in 75% of cases of normal antral mucosa, however, in low numbers. It is concluded that 87% of patients with non-ulcer dyspepsia are H. polory-positive implying a larger role for the micro-organism as initially thought.
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PMID:Presence of Helicobacter pylori in patients with non-ulcer dyspepsia revealing normal antral histological characteristics. 229 46

Recent advances of Campylobacter pylori (C. pylori) in human gastric disease and peptic ulcer were reviewed. C. pylori is a microaerophilic, motile, gram negative spiral rod bacterium. And all strains of C. pylori has a strong urease activity. In our experience. 91% of duodenal ulcer, 88% of gastric ulcer and 43% of control have C. pylori associated gastric mucosa. Patients of peptic ulcer with C. pylori infection were high relapse than patients of peptic ulcer without C. pylori, C. pylori is now known to be the most common and important case of pathologic gastritis, and C. pylori infection have been associated with gastric ulcer, duodenal ulcer, and non-ulcer dyspepsia. Although it has been only possible to culture C. pylori for about 6 yr in Japan, there are already sufficient data available to allow us to develop the basic framework that relates C. pylori gastritis to the causation of peptic ulcer disease.
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PMID:[Campylobacter pylori in patients with gastroduodenal disease]. 232 83

In a prospective study, histopathological examination 298 upper gastrointestinal (UGI) biopsies, obtained from 201 consecutive patients, was made. Patients were referred with mild to severe dyspeptic symptoms. The aim of the study was to compare the rate of identification of Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) in the histologically normal gastric mucosa with that in histologically confirmed gastritis or peptic ulcer disease. The gastroduodenal mucosa was histologically normal in 35 patients (17.4%); among those patients, H. pylori was identified in only three (9%). Chronic gastritis was histologically confirmed in 162 patients (80.6%). H. pylori was identified in 123 (76%) of those patients. The difference was statistically significant (p less than 0.00001). Furthermore, when cases with a histological diagnosis of superficial chronic active gastritis (SCAG) are considered separately, the identification rate of H. pylori increases to 88% (121 of 137). When this rate is compared with that of 8% (two of 25), found in superficial chronic quiescent gastritis (SCQG), the difference is highly significant (p less than 0.00001). Of 38 endoscopically diagnosed peptic ulcers, H. pylori was identified in the gastric mucosa of 34 (89%). The organisms were always seen in the antral gastric mucosa, but never in duodenal mucosa. Identification of H. pylori correlates significantly with the histologic activity of chronic gastritis, in both peptic ulcer disease and non-ulcer dyspepsia.
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PMID:Helicobacter pylori-associated upper gastrointestinal disease in Saudi Arabia: a pathologic evaluation of 298 endoscopic biopsies from 201 consecutive patients. 233 55

Endoscopic gastric antral biopsy specimens (133) from 92 dyspeptic patients with endoscopically evident gastritis (34; including one patient with dual pathology) gastric ulcer (13), duodenitis (17; including one patient with dual pathology) duodenal ulcer (29) and 41 subjects of non ulcer dyspepsia (NUD) with endoscopically normal upper gastrointestinal tract were examined for H. pylori by stained smear, various urease tests, culture and histopathology. Crushed tissue smear stained by Gram's method using carbol fuchsin counterstain proved to be the simplest and a reliable technique. Up to 4 h urease broth + ve test correlated well with smear and culture. Positive association of H. pylori with disease was considered when at least two of the above methods were suggestive. Significantly higher positivities were observed in gastritis (61.7%), gastric ulcer (84.6%), duodenitis (58.8%) and duodenal ulcer (82.8%) patients, as compared to NUD subjects (46.3%). Severe histopathological lesions were frequently associated with multiple bacteriological test positives.
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PMID:Evaluation of different methods for detection of Helicobacter pylori in patients with gastric disease. 234 21

An enzyme linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) with a sonicated suspension of Helicobacter (Campylobacter) pylori as antigen was used to detect anti-H. pylori antibodies in 517 patients without dyspepsia or peptic ulcer symptoms and 401 healthy blood donors. The criterion of seropositivity was determined from a receiver operating curve computed with the values of optical densities of 48 sera from dyspeptic patients with proven helicobacter-associated gastritis and 16 sera from dyspeptic patients with normal antral mucosa and no microbiological or histological evidence of H. pylori infection. The 227 (44%) seropositive persons amongst the patient group appeared to be significantly higher than the 142 (35%) sera with antibodies in the blood donors tested (p less than 0.03), even when adjustment was made for increasing age. We conclude that the prevalence of antibodies against H. pylori increases with age and that although antibodies are more prevalent in patients attending a hospital than in healthy blood donors, seropositivity suggestive of current or past infection can be found in one third of a randomly chosen population of blood donors.
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PMID:The prevalence of anti-Helicobacter (Campylobacter) pylori antibodies in patients and healthy blood donors. 235 91

Duodenal bulb biopsy specimens from 85 patients with non-ulcer dyspepsia (30 of whom had normal stomachs and 52 of whom had Campylobacter pylori gastritis) were examined for the presence and amount of gastric surface epithelial metaplasia (using both the hematoxylin and eosin stain and the Alcian blue-periodic acid-Schiff method), acute inflammation, and C. pylori (using the Giemsa stain). Gastric metaplasia occurred in the duodenal bulb in 61% of patients with gastric C. pylori and in an identical percentage for those who lacked C. pylori gastritis. For patients with gastric metaplasia, foci of metaplastic cells were seen in 70% of their bulb biopsy fragments. The Alcian blue-periodic acid-Schiff stain was superior to the hematoxylin and eosin stain for detecting gastric metaplasia. Only one of 33 patients without gastric C. pylori had gastritis and duodenitis. Fourteen of 52 (27%) patients with C. pylori gastritis had duodenitis; C. pylori was seen in the duodenal biopsy specimens from 13 of these patients. The organisms were often few, requiring oil immersion microscopy for detection. Each patient with duodenitis had gastric metaplasia, but some of these metaplastic foci were not inflamed. When present in the duodenum of patients with C. pylori gastritis, gastric metaplasia, acute inflammation, and C. pylori are typically patchy. Hence, several biopsy fragments of the duodenal bulb would be required for studies designed to determine the effectiveness of compounds used to treat C. pylori duodenitis.
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PMID:Duodenal bulb biopsy findings for patients with non-ulcer dyspepsia with or without Campylobacter pylori gastritis. 236 37

Peptic ulcer occurs with different frequencies in the three main racial groups in Singapore. This study aimed firstly to determine the prevalence of Helicobacter pylori in peptic ulcer and non-ulcer dyspepsia patients of the different races and secondly, to assess the relation between H pylori, histological gastritis, patient diagnosis, and race. Gastric antral biopsy specimens from 1502 patients undergoing gastroduodenoscopy were studied and 892 (59%) were positive for H pylori. H pylori was strongly associated with gastritis: 873 of 1197 (73%) patients with gastritis were positive compared with 19 of 305 (6%) without gastritis (p less than 0.0001). The prevalences of H pylori and gastritis were similar in peptic ulcer patients of different races. Malay patients with non-ulcer dyspepsia, however, were less likely to be positive for H pylori (10 of 46 (22%] or to have antral gastritis (17 of 46 (37%] than Chinese (292 of 605 (48%) were positive for H pylori and 421 of 605 (70%) had gastritis) and Indians (35 of 61 (57%) were H pylori positive and 42 of 61 (69%) had gastritis). Patients with duodenal ulcer were more likely to be positive for H pylori than those with non-ulcer dyspepsia, even when subjects with gastritis were considered separately. While our results do not help to explain the observed racial differences in peptic ulcer frequency it may be that the pathophysiology of non-ulcer dyspepsia is different in the different races in Singapore.
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PMID:Helicobacter pylori and gastritis in patients with peptic ulcer and non-ulcer dyspepsia: ethnic differences in Singapore. 238 3

129 patients, Panamanians and North Americans, with chronic dyspepsia, were prospectively studied regarding infection by H. pylori and the type of gastroduodenal pathology diagnosed by endoscopy and histology. The rapid urea split test was compared with the culture. The percentage of patients infected by H. pylori increased with age. Patients under 30, 37%; 31 to 40, 61%; 41 to 76, 75%. H. pylori was found in 70% of the Panamanians and 54% of the americans. H. pylori infected 81%, 75%, 54% and 29% of the patients with duodenal ulcer, chronic gastritis, duodenitis, and patients with normal endoscopy and histology, respectively. The rapid urea split test had a positive predictive value of 98%. The results were discussed and the literature reviewed.
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PMID:[Helicobacter pylori and gastroduodenal pathology in the Republic of Panama]. 239 79


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