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)

Campylobacter pylori is a newly described, spiral-shaped, gram-negative bacillus that is oxidase positive, catalase positive, and urease positive and grows slowly in culture. Although observed in human tissue at the beginning of the century, it was not cultured until 1982. Because there are significant morphological and genetic differences between this organism and other species of Campylobacter, it will probably be reclassified in a new genus. Current information indicates that the organism primarily resides in the stomach tissue of humans and nonhuman primates and may occasionally spread to the esophagus or other parts of the alimentary tract under appropriate conditions. Significant evidence has accumulated in the last several years to show that it causes gastritis, and there is mounting evidence that it may participate in the development of duodenal ulcers. It may also be associated with gastric ulcers and nonulcer dyspepsia. It can be detected in patients by culture of biopsy specimens or histological staining of biopsy tissue. Indirect evidence for the presence of the organism can be obtained by detection of urease in a tissue biopsy specimen, by urea breath tests, or by detection of specific antibody. It may not be necessary to implement these procedures for routine use, however, until the role of the organism can be defined better. Ultimately, the discovery of this organism may lead to radical changes in the diagnosis and treatment of gastric disease.
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PMID:Campylobacter pylori and gastroduodenal disease. 240 65

Despite the increasing awareness of gastrinoma and its lethal peptic ulcer sequelae, the diagnosis is often initially missed or made as a terminal event. The authors screened all patients with peptic ulcer symptoms serious enough to warrant hospital admission or those associated with diarrhea, nephrolithiasis, hypercalcemia, or pituitary abnormality. In a one-year period (1979-1980) nine (of 14 suspected) new gastrinoma patients were identified using a sensitive and specific gastrin radioimmunoassay in combination with provocative tests including IV secretin, calcium, and food. Conventional upper GI series, CAT scan, arteriography, and endoscopy provided no additional information other than to confirm the presence of ulcer disease. Basal plasma gastrin levels were more than 200 pmol L-1 in only three of the nine (normal fasting plasma gastrin levels are less than 25 pmol L-1). Three patients presented with acute ulcer perforation, and the diagnosis of gastrinoma was suspected because of multiple ulcers and pancreatic masses. In three other patients, previous duodenal ulcer surgery had failed. One patient with dyspepsia, high basal plasma gastrin, negative secretin and calcium infusion studies, and a positive meal test was diagnosed as having G-cell hyperplasia; this was confirmed by biopsy and antral gastrin extraction. Antrectomy alone resulted in cure. In all patients tested, a positive calcium infusion or secretin bolus (greater than 100% rise over basal) strongly suggested the diagnosis of gastrinoma, which was confirmed at surgery. In the acute perforations, initial management with omental patch and cimetidine therapy allowed survival of two patients, while emergency total gastrectomy in the third resulted in death due to esophagojejunal leak. Elective patients were treated with cimetidine initially for at least two weeks before total gastrectomy. In this group there were no operative mortalities, and postoperative morbidity was minimal. This series illustrates three important points: (1) careful screening of an ulcer population using gastrin radioimmunoassay and provocative tests has enabled a high yield of gastrinomas while conventional investigations are of minimal values; (2) a high index of suspicion in appropriate cases is necessary; and (3) total gastrectomy performed under elective circumstances is safe and allows the patients to resume a normal and healthy life without the sequelae of aggressive peptic ulceration or daily drug administration.
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PMID:The early diagnosis of gastrinoma. 712 38

Lipoma is a benign tumour of mesenchymal origin which is not frequently localized in the gastroenteric tract; in anatomopathological statistics it is less rare: this is due to the fact that it rarely reaches dimensions which warrant surgical treatment. It is usually either an occasional finding during the course of laparotomy due to other motives or is the cause of complications, as in the present case of intestinal occlusion due to ileocolic invagination, resulting in emergency surgery. As a cause of occlusion tumours of the small bowel are second in terms of incidence to adhesive factors, volvuli and hernias. Invaginations account for 2/3 of small bowel occlusions caused by up to 80% of tumours: the lipoma is the most frequent benign tumour to cause invagination in its submucous polypoid and more or less scissile form. Symptoms are not specific and this causes a delay in diagnosis. Patients are often young subjects with a history of recurrent abdominal colic and sensitivity to anti-spastic drugs so much so that in the past they were diagnosed as "chronic colic" sufferers. Sometimes the only symptom is dyspepsia, or nausea and vomiting, or occasionally abdominal distension with constipation or attacks of diarrhoea. Radiology is not of great value in the diagnosis except for indicating the possible need for emergency surgery. There are no radiological tests, with or without contrast mediums, echography, CAT or MNR which can diagnose this pathology. The decision to operate is usually triggered by the presence of a complication, but perioperative extemporary histological tests are advisable for a correct surgical approach: if the form is scissile, segmentary resection of the small bowel is necessary.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Lipoma of the small intestine as a rare cause of intestinal occlusion]. 799 Dec 7

Although certain factors appear to predispose the host to infection by Helicobacter pylori, clearly the bacterium possesses a well-defined battery of virulence factors that allow the organism to: (1) colonize the gastric mucosa (urease, flagella, adhesins, acid-inhibitory protein, iron acquisition proteins, and heat shock proteins); (2) evade host defense (shedding of surface proteins, catalase, superoxide dismutase, and poorly reactive lipopolysaccharide); and (3) damage host tissue (vacuolating cytotoxin, protease, CagA-related factors, inducers of cytokines, and chemotaxins). Together these factors allow H. pylori to persist in the host, establishing a chronic infection. Although many of these virulence factors are produced by all strains of H. pylori, there are also well-defined pathogenicity islands (contiguous stretches of chromosomal DNA) present in some strains that encode additional proteins including CagA that potentiate virulence. Strains possessing these "virulence cassettes" are isolated more frequently from patients with the more serious clinical manifestations associated with duodenal ulcer than from patients with gastritis alone or nonulcer dyspepsia.
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PMID:Helicobacter pylori factors associated with disease development. 939 56

Recently, we reported that the patterns of antibodies to Helicobacter pylori protein antigens in serum may be useful for screening patients at high risk for ulcers (P. Aucher et al., J. Clin. Microbiol. 36:931-936, 1998). Here we report the identification, by a combination of electrophoretic, immunochemical, and protein sequencing methods, of five antigens that correspond to this antibody pattern: groEL, catalase A, flagellin A, beta-ketoacyl-acyl carrier protein synthase I (beta-ketoacyl-ACP S), and peptidyl prolyl cis-trans isomerase (PPiase). Beta-Ketoacyl-ACP S and PPiase are reported for the first time as antigens of diagnostic interest in infections by H. pylori. The antigenicity of the five antigens, together with those of CagA and VacA, was tested in an immunoblot assay with water-soluble protein extracts from two H. pylori pathogenic strains (HP 141 and ATCC 43579) and panels of sera from H. pylori-positive patients with gastroduodenal ulcers (GDU), nonulcer dyspepsia (NUD), as well as sera from H. pylori-negative healthy volunteers. For catalase A, groEL, and flagellin A antigens, no overall statistically important values were found making it possible to discriminate between patients with GDU and NUD. For both H. pylori strains, the mean performance indices (MPI) presenting percentages of correctly classified patients with GDU and NUD showed that the most significant antibody patterns were as follows: anti-VacA + anti-beta-ketoacyl-ACP S (MPI = 76.1), anti-VacA + anti-PPiase (MPI = 71.8), and anti-CagA + anti-VacA + anti-beta-ketoacyl-ACP S (MPI = 70.5). Antibody patterns detected with these antigen profiles may therefore be useful in developing a diagnostic test designed to predict the clinical severity of the H. pylori infection within the adult population of France.
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PMID:Novel antigens of Helicobacter pylori correspond to ulcer-related antibody pattern of sera from infected patients. 1182 70

Peppermint plants have been used as a herbal medicine for many conditions, including loss of appetite, common cold, bronchitis, sinusitis, fever, nausea, vomiting and indigestion. This study is aimed at investigating the biochemical and histological effects of Mentha piperita L., growing in the Yenisar Bademli town of Isparta City, and Mentha spicata L., growing on the Anamas high plateau of Isparta City, on rat kidney tissue. Forty-eight male Wistar albino rats weighing 200-250 g were used for this study. Animals were divided into four experimental groups, each with 12 rats, as follows: control group (group I); 20 g/L M. piperita tea (group II); 20 g/L M. spicata tea (group III); 40 g/L M. spicata tea (group IV). The control group rats were given commercial drinking water (Hayat DANONESA water). The tea for the other groups was prepared daily and provided at all times to the rats during 30 days as drinking water. Plasma urea and creatinine levels were determined, and the levels of thiobarbituric acid reactive substance (TBARS) and the activities of glutathione peroxidase (GSH-Px), catalase (CAT) and superoxide dismutase (SOD) were studied in the homogenates of kidney tissue. The levels of plasma urea and creatinine were increased significantly (P < 0.0033) in groups III and IV when compared with group I. The activities of SOD and GSH-Px were decreased significantly (P < 0.0033) in group IV when compared with group I. The activities of CAT were decreased significantly in groups III and IV (P < 0.033, P < 0.0033, respectively) when compared with group I. TBARS levels were increased significantly (P < 0.0033) in groups III and IV when compared with group I. In groups II, III and IV, hydropic degeneration of tubular epithelial cells, the epithelial cells with picnotic nuclei and eosinophilic cytoplasm, tubular dilatation and enlargements in Bowman capsules were observed histologically. However, in group II histopathological changes were more slight than in groups III and IV. In group IV, in addition to these changes, extremely hydropic degeneration of tubular epithelial cells, some atrophic tubules and glomerules, and focal mononuclear cell infiltrations in the kidney tissues of the rats were observed. In conclusion, the results indicate that M. piperita does not show nephrotoxicity but M. spicata presents markedly nephrotoxic changes in rats.
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PMID:Investigation of biochemical and histopathological effects of Mentha piperita L. and Mentha spicata L. on kidney tissue in rats. 1275 72

The plant Mentha piperita, or peppermint, is commonly used in the treatment of loss of appetite, common cold, bronchitis, sinusitis, fever, nausea and vomiting, and indigestion as a herbal agent. In this study, we aimed to investigate biochemical and histological effects of M. piperita Labiatae, growing in the Yenisar Bademli town of Isparta city, and Mentha spicata Labiatae, growing in the Anamas high plateau of the Yenisar Bademli town, on the rat liver tissue. Forty-eight male Wistar albino rats weighing 200-250 g were used for this study. Rats were divided into four groups of 12 animals: Group I received no herbal tea (control group); Group II received 20 g/L M. piperita tea; Group III received 20 g/L M. spicata tea; and Group IV received 40 g/L M. spicata tea. Herbal teas were prepared daily and provided at all times to the rats during 30 days as drinking water. Liver function tests, including aspartate aminotransferase (AST/GOT) and alanine aminotransferase (ALT/GPT) activities were measured. To evaluate liver antioxidant defences, superoxide dismutase (SOD), glutathione peroxidase (GSH-Px), catalase (CAT) and thiobarbituric acid reactive substance (TBARS) activities were determined in the homogenates of liver tissue. In addition, liver tissues were submitted for histopathologic examination. AST and ALT activities were increased in Group II, Group III and Group IV gradually when compared with the control group. The difference between Group II and the control group was not statistically significant (P > 0.016). Increases in AST and ALT activities of Group III and Group IV were statistically significant when compared with the control group. SOD, GSH-Px and CAT activities were increased in Group II when compared with the control group but the difference was not statistically significant (P > 0.016). However, SOD, GSH-Px activities and the TBARS level were significantly increased, and CAT activity was significantly decreased in Group III when compared with the control group. In Group IV, while SOD, GSH-Px and CAT activities were decreased, the TBARS level was increased as compared with the control group (P < 0.0016). Histopathological evaluation of experimental groups revealed a mild to severe degree of hepatic damage when compared to the control group. In Group II, there was only minimal hepatocytes degeneration. In Groups III and IV, there were granular or ballooning hepatocyte degeneration and necrosis, sinusoidal and central vein dilatation. It was concluded that lipid peroxidation and hepatic damage occurs after M. piperita and M. spicata administration in rat liver and the damage seems to be dose dependent.
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PMID:Investigation of biochemical and histopathological effects of Mentha piperita Labiatae and Mentha spicata Labiatae on liver tissue in rats. 1502 12

Ethanolic extracts from nine medicinal plants are combined in Iberogast (IG). This phytomedicine is successfully used in the treatment of gastrointestinal disorders. Functional gastrointestinal diseases such as non-ulcerous dyspepsia (NUD) are in many cases initiated by, or correlated to, inflammatory processes, where reactive oxygen species (ROS) play a crucial role. In this respect one prominent source of ROS are myeloperoxidase (MPO)-driven oxidation and chlorination reactions, assumed to be mainly responsible for tissue damage. In this study the contribution of the nine extracts to the overall performance of IG was compared with emphasis on MPO produced ROS. Concerning the influence on MPO-dependent chlorination reactions, it turned out that of the nine IG-components Iberis amara extract (IAE) exerted the highest activity. Furthermore, this can impressively be reproduced in an ex vivo experiment with whole blood, where neutrophilic leukocytes are activated by zymosan. Moreover, along with the extract of chamomile flowers, IAE counteracts the pro-oxidative properties of caraway, peppermint and celandine. As a consequence. IG was also efficiently inhibiting MPO-catalysed chlorinations. As shown by the addition of catalase, the pro-oxidative effects of caraway, peppermint and celandine are due to their content of hydrogen peroxide. The latter is probably an autoxidation product of certain monoterpenes in the essential oil part of these extracts. If one of the component extracts of IG is omitted, the antioxidant acitivity is reduced. Thus we conclude that all the single extracts combined in IG are of importance for the therapeutical effect, working in concert.
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PMID:Comparison of the inhibition of myeloperoxidase-catalyzed hypochlorite formation in vitro and in whole blood by different plant extracts contained in a phytopharmacon treating functional dyspepsia. 1534 43

Reactive oxygen species have been implicated in the etiology of multiple organ dyspepsia syndrome and infection's complications in patients with trauma. But the oxidative stress and antioxidants levels in abdominal trauma have not yet been studied. Therefore, this study was planned to measure lipid peroxidation for oxidative stress and reduced glutathione, catalase and superoxide dismutase (SOD) for antioxidant levels in plasma & heamolysate of 30 patients with abdominal trauma and 30 controls. From this study we can summarize that there was an increase in oxidative stress and decrease in antioxidant levels (causing oxidative stress) on day zero in patients with abdominal trauma. This oxidative stress on day zero was not related to the development of complications. There was no significant difference in oxidative stress between patients with solitary and multiple abdominal organ injury and also between patients with hollow viscus injury and solid organ injury on day zero. From this study, we conclude that in patients with abdominal trauma there was increase in oxidative stress and decrease in antioxidant levels on day zero.
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PMID:Study on oxidative stress in patients with abdominal trauma. 1673 3

Pongamia pinnata has been advocated in Ayurveda for the treatment of various inflammatory conditions and dyspepsia. The present work includes initial phytochemical screening and study of ulcer protective and healing effects of methanolic extract of seeds of P. pinnata (PPSM) in rats. Phytochemical tests indicated the presence of flavonoids in PPSM. PPSM when administered orally (po) showed dose-dependent (12.5-50 mg/kg for 5 days) ulcer protective effects against gastric ulcer induced by 2 h cold restraint stress. Optimal effective dose of PPSM (25 mg/kg) showed antiulcerogenic activity against acute gastric ulcers (GU) induced by pylorus ligation and aspirin and duodenal ulcer induced by cysteamine but not against ethanol-induced GU. It healed chronic gastric ulcer induced by acetic acid when given for 5 and 10 days. Further, its effects were studied on various parameters of gastric offensive acid-pepsin secretion, lipid peroxidation (LPO) and nitric oxide (NO) and defensive mucosal factors like mucin secretion and mucosal cell shedding, glycoproteins, proliferation and antioxidants; catalase (CAT), superoxide dismutase (SOD) and glutathione (GSH) levels. PPSM tended to decrease acid output and increased mucin secretion and mucosal glycoproteins, while it decreased gastric mucosal cell shedding without any effect on cell proliferation. PPSM significantly reversed the increase in gastric mucosal LPO, NO and SOD levels caused by CRS near to the normal level while it tended to increase CAT and GSH level decreased by CRS and ethanol respectively. Thus, the ulcer protective effects of PPSM may be attributed to the presence of flavonoids and the actions may be due to its effects both on mucosal offensive and defensive factors.
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PMID:Effect of methanolic extract of Pongamia pinnata Linn seed on gastro-duodenal ulceration and mucosal offensive and defensive factors in rats. 1977 71


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