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Query: UMLS:C0024623 (
gastric cancer
)
36,219
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Gastrin may play a role in gastric carcinogenesis, as indicated by an increased frequency of gastric carcinomas in patients with
pernicious anaemia
and the fact some human
gastric cancer
cell lines carry the gastrin receptor. Recently, it has been shown that the acid-stimulatory effect of gastrin may be solely mediated by histamine release from the enterochromaffin-like (ECL) cell, on which gastrin has a specific trophic effect. We therefore found it of interest to examine human gastric carcinomas for the presence of ECL tumour cells by using silver staining and chromogranin immunohistochemistry. We found evidence of ECL cell-derived tumour cells in 40% of the diffuse gastric carcinomas but no such tumour cells in the intestinal type of gastric carcinoma. This may suggest that diffuse gastric carcinomas, like malignant gastric tumours of the mastomys, are in fact malignant ECLomas.
...
PMID:Enterochromaffin-like tumour cells in the diffuse but not the intestinal type of gastric carcinomas. 171 Mar 71
The possibilities to screen atrophic corpus gastritis with serum pepsinogen I (S-PGI) and serum gastrin (S-gastrin) concentrations have been studied in 774 subjects: 71 index subjects selected from a general population at random, 353 of their first-degree relatives, 276 first-degree relatives of patients with
gastric cancer
, 53 patients with
pernicious anaemia
, and 21 of their relatives. Discrimination function analysis was calculated from members of random and gastric carcinoma families. S-PGI less than 30 ng/ml had a high sensitivity for severe diffuse atrophic corpus gastritis (SDAG) alone (89.5%) and SDAG + severe patchy atrophic corpus gastritis (SPAG) (89.1%). Respective figures for specificity were 91.5% and 94.8%. The discriminatory power of S-PGI less than 30 ng/ml and S-PGI less than 25 ng/ml was of the same order. The sensitivity of low S-PGI decreased sharply in detection of slighter forms of atrophic corpus gastritis. The sensitivity of S-gastrin greater than 100 pmol/l to discriminate SDAG was 57.9% and SDAG+SPAG 58.7%. Respective figures for specificity were 90.2% and 92.2%. Diffuse and patchy atrophic changes behaved similarly regarding S-PGI and S-gastrin mean concentrations. Accordingly, the biopsy specimen with the severest atrophic changes indicates the degree of atrophy, which associates closely with the changes in S-PGI and S-gastrin. In conclusion, severe atrophic (diffuse or patchy) corpus gastritis may be screened from a general population with high sensitivity and specificity by low S-PGI less than 30 ng/ml, whereas an increased level of S-gastrin is too insensitive for this.
...
PMID:Serum pepsinogen I and serum gastrin in the screening of severe atrophic corpus gastritis. 175 17
Serum pepsinogen I (S-PGI) and serum gastrin (S-gastrin) were examined in the screening of three types of atrophic gastritis with inherent high risk of
gastric cancer
: in 102 cases with severe atrophic corpus gastritis (SACG), in 5 cases with severe atrophic antrum gastritis (SAAG), and in 15 cases with severe atrophic pangastritis (SAPG) (atrophy both in corpus and in antrum) found among 916 subjects from three family series (265 from
gastric cancer
families, 425 from randomly selected control families and 226 from
pernicious anaemia
families). There is no way to screen directly atrophic gastritis restricted to the antral mucosa. In pangastritis atrophy of antral glands causes a failure of the hypergastrinemic reaction of achlorhydria. The combination of S-PGI less than 25 micrograms/l + S-gastrin less than 200 pmol/l detected 80.0% of our cases with SAPG, and only 17 subjects of 794 (2.1%) were false positives i.e. who had not advanced atrophic gastritis. The risk of
gastric cancer
may be significantly higher in SAPG than in SACG. The estimated prevalence of SAPG was 3% in random-family members over 60 years. The combination of S-PGI and S-gastrin is recommended when the cost/benefit ratio in the screening program of
gastric cancer
is considered and people from a general population are selected for endoscopic studies.
...
PMID:Serum pepsinogen I and serum gastrin in the screening of atrophic pangastritis with high risk of gastric cancer. 175 19
Gastric cancer
, especially adenocarcinoma, is variable in incidence on the world. In this paper, there is a review of the epidemiology and the etiopathogenic factors of the disease: genetics, hereditary, immunologic and environmental and, also, of the so called precursor diseases: atrophic gastritis and intestinal metaplasia, gastric adenoma, gastrectomized patients,
pernicious anemia
and Menetrier's disease. There is an explanation about the changes of the gastric epithelium related both with the intestinal and diffuse type of adenocarcinoma; the anatomo-pathological notion of macroscopic advanced-Borrmann and early cancer-Japanese classification and the clinical and diagnostic procedures are included with the fundamentals of therapeutic management.
...
PMID:[Gastric cancer]. 180 29
Ascorbic acid has been shown to decrease nitrosation in vivo, and epidemiological data suggest that the consumption of foods rich in this vitamin is associated with a reduced risk for
gastric cancer
. In order to study this suggestion further, fasting gastric juice samples were obtained from 62 high-risk patients (seven with atrophic gastritis, ten with
pernicious anaemia
, ten with partial gastrectomy, 21 with vagotomy and drainage and 14 with highly selective vagotomy), before, during four weeks' treatment with 1 g ascorbic acid four times daily, and four weeks after treatment. Samples were analysed for pH, total and nitrate-reducing bacterial counts, nitrite and N-nitroso compounds. Treatment with ascorbic acid lowered the median pH only in the vagotomized patients (p less than 0.001) but resulted in a reduction in median nitrate-reducing bacterial counts and in nitrite and N-nitroso compound concentrations in all groups, except for an increase in the nitrate-reducing bacterial count in atrophic gastritis patients and in nitrite in those with
pernicious anaemia
. These data suggest that treatment with a high dose of ascorbic acid reduces the intragastric formation of nitrite and N-nitroso compounds.
...
PMID:Effect of ascorbic acid on the intragastric environment in patients at increased risk of developing gastric cancer. 185 37
Gastric antral vascular ectasia (GAVE), or watermelon stomach, is an uncommon cause of chronic gastrointestinal blood loss and iron deficiency anemia. Although GAVE has not previously been reported in association with
gastric cancer
, it is often associated with atrophic gastritis and
pernicious anemia
, which are known risk factors for gastric malignancy. We report a 72-yr-old woman with
pernicious anemia
who was found to have GAVE associated with adenosquamous carcinoma of the gastric cardia and adenocarcinoma in situ of the pylorus. In view of recent reports of the use of endoscopic modalities rather than surgical resection to treat GAVE, our case alerts endoscopists to the possibility of coexisting carcinoma.
...
PMID:Gastric antral vascular ectasia associated with gastric carcinoma. 203 4
A 45 year-old-female was admitted to Kanagawa Rehabilitation Center because of marked spastic paraplegia. There was no family history of neurological diseases. She had been drinking a great excess of alcohol since twenty years of age. Though she noticed the unsteadiness of gait several years prior to the admission, she had not been examined. On admission neurological examination revealed pyramidal weakness of both legs, and slight sensory impairment in distal part of the lower extremities. But she had neither difficulty in speech nor abnormal findings in the upper extremities. Her mentality was well preserved. Though computed tomography revealed cerebellar cortical atrophy, no signs of cerebellar impairment could not be found except spastic paraplegia. Blood chemistry failed to reveal liver dysfunction. There was no
pernicious anemia
. These symptoms were almost stationary until her death. At the age of 53, she died of
gastric cancer
. Postmortem examination disclosed marked degeneration of cerebellum and spinal cord. Cerebellar cortical degeneration, which was characterized by involvement of all layers of the cortex, showed unique distribution. The lingula, central lobule, culmen, superior portion of declive, anterior lobules and anteromedial half of simple lobule were severely degenerated, while other lobules were spared excluding moderate degeneration in inferomedian portion of the hemisphere. These cortical degeneration was prominent much more in vermis than in hemisphere. There was a mild myelin pallor in the lamellar white matter and slight fibrous gliosis. In the dentate nucleus, there were moderate neuronal loss with gliosis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[An autopsied case of alcoholic cerebellar degeneration with spastic paraplegia and neuropathy]. 216 87
The formation of a benign gastric ulcer in an achlorhydric milieu is a rare phenomenon. Since 1971, only 12 cases have been reported. Early cases were treated surgically for fear of
gastric cancer
, but since that time such ulcers have been successfully treated medically. The authors describe the case of a patient who had no concomitant ulcerogenic factors and whose ulcer occurred in the gastric cardia at the esophagogastric junction. We believe this is the first case report of a patient with
pernicious anemia
meeting these conditions.
...
PMID:Benign gastric ulcers and pernicious anemia. 235 81
There are reasons to believe that chronic antral gastritis and chronic body gastritis are different clinical conditions. While both are associated with aging, chronic antral gastritis is much more commonly associated with gastric or duodenal ulcer. The natural history of chronic antral gastritis in asymptomatic normals and patients with peptic ulcer appears the same. Chronic body gastritis deteriorates rapidly with age in patients with gastric ulcer, but does not progress in patients with duodenal ulcer. With spontaneous healing of duodenal ulcer, chronic antral gastritis improves but persists. All these observations suggest that gastric ulcer, duodenal ulcer, and chronic antral gastritis are involved in a common mucosal inflammatory process. C. pylori occurs commonly on the antral mucosa affected by chronic gastritis, but is found to a much less extent at the site of peptic ulceration, and spontaneous ulcer healing is not affected by the presence of the organisms. It remains to be established whether C. pylori is the cause of chronic antral gastritis, is an aggravating factor of the gastritis, or is simply an inhabitant of the inflamed antral mucosa. Other known associations of chronic gastritis include
pernicious anemia
, bile reflux, and
gastric cancer
. Whether chronic antral or body gastritis is associated with clinical symptoms remains controversial. Histological improvement can be obtained with the use of prostaglandins, sucralfate, or bismuth compounds, which have one common property--they all possess mucosal-protective mechanisms.
...
PMID:Etiology and management of chronic gastritis. 264 23
Fasting gastric juice pH and concentrations of vitamin C in gastric aspirate and plasma were measured in 73 patients undergoing endoscopy. Vitamin C concentrations were significantly lower in those with hypochlorhydria (pH greater than 4; n = 23) compared with those with pH less than or equal to 4 (p less than 0.005) and there was a significant correlation between gastric juice and plasma concentrations (p = 0.002). Patients with normal endoscopic findings had significantly higher intragastric concentrations of vitamin C than those with
gastric cancer
(p less than 0.001),
pernicious anaemia
(p less than 0.005), gastric ulcer (p less than 0.01), duodenal ulcer (p less than 0.05), or after gastric surgery (p less than 0.01). There was a strong trend (0.05 less than p less than 0.1) towards lower intragastric concentrations of vitamin C in patients with chronic atrophic gastritis. In vitro, vitamin C concentrations remained stable in acidic but fell significantly over 24 hours in alkaline gastric aspirate. Gastric secretory studies in five volunteers showed that vitamin C concentrations increased significantly after intramuscular pentagastrin. These findings suggest that the low fasting levels of vitamin C in hypochlorhydric gastric juice may be caused by chemical instability and that vitamin C may be secreted by the human stomach.
...
PMID:Vitamin C in the human stomach: relation to gastric pH, gastroduodenal disease, and possible sources. 271 77
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