Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0024623 (gastric cancer)
36,219 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The frequency and characteristics of epithelial gastric polyps were studied over a 4-years periods. In a series of 13,000 gastric fibroscopies, 191 patients (1.3 per cent) were fund to have a "polypous lesion". Among these, 48 had hyperplastic polyps, 19 had fundic gland polyps and 6 had adenomatous polyps. The remaining patients had either lesions of interstitial gastritis (118) or normal histology (34). Hyperplastic polyps were 5 mm large in 87 per cent of the cases, and 7 out of 10 were solitary. They were equally distributed between fundus and antrum and associated with atrophic gastritis in 9 out of 22 cases. In 2 cases, they were accompanied with gastric cancer. Fundic gland polyps were less than 5 mm large in 84 per cent of the cases and solitary in 5 out of 19 cases. Adenomatous polyps were associated with hyperplastic polyps in 4 patients, including 1 mixed polyp (hyperplastic containing adenomatous areas). Follow-up with regular endoscopic examinations is accepted for adenomatous polyps; it seems to be justified in patients with hyperplastic polyps, and lesions bigger than 10 mm should be removed in view of the as yet imperfectly evaluated risk of malignant degeneration.
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PMID:[Epithelial gastric polyps in a series of 13000 gastroscopies]. 213 48

Many investigators have reported that gastric mucosal biopsies of patients with chronic gastritis and peptic ulcer disease show the presence of Campylobacter pylori in a large majority of cases. Histologic examinations of such tissues indicate a close approximation of C. pylori with gastric surface epithelial cells. A recent report has described both adherence and cell invasion of gastric cells by C. pylori. Using a transmission electron microscope, we have examined the interaction between C. pylori, C. jejuni, and E. coli in vitro with a gastric cancer cell line, Kato III. Our results indicate marked toxicity of E. coli and moderate toxicity of C. jejuni for Kato III cells. C. pylori had only a minor effect on tissue culture viability. C. pylori was found to have a strong association with the Kato III cell membranes and evidence of occasional cell invasion. Both C. jejuni and E. coli showed no attachment or association with the Kato III cells. We interpret these findings as indicating that C. pylori may have a specific adhesion for gastric cells.
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PMID:Campylobacter pylori interactions with gastric cell tissue culture. 221 57

NCC-ST-439 is a monoclonal antibody established from human stomach cancer xenografted nude mice. The values of NCC-ST-439 were measured in 139 cases with various digestive tract cancers and 294 cases with benign digestive tract diseases with the NCC-ST-439 EIA kit (Nihon Kayaku Co., Ltd.), and its clinical usefulness was compared with those of CA19-9 and CEA. The positive rates of NCC-ST-439 in cases of digestive tract cancer were high, i.e., 66.7% for cancer of the bile duct, 58.3% for pancreatic cancer and 52.9% for colorectal cancer. In the benign digestive tract diseases, the overall positive rate seen in case of cholelithiasis and cholangitis, chronic gastritis, benign colorectal diseases and hepatitis, was only 3.7%. The positive rate of NCC-ST-439 was lower than those for CA19-9 and CEA in cases of stomach cancer, colorectal cancer and liver cancer, but it was the same as that of CA19-9 and higher than that of CEA in cases of biliary tract cancer and pancreatic cancer. The false positive rate of NCC-ST-439 in benign diseases of the digestive tract was the lowest among the three markers. With respect to sensitivity, specificity and efficiency, CA19-9 showed the highest sensitivity, but NCC-ST-439 and CEA showed better specificity than CA19-9, and NCC-ST-439 showed the highest efficiency. In combination assays using combinations of NCC-ST-439, CA19-9 and CEA, the positive rates for ST-439 alone were 22.1% for stomach cancer, 52.9% for colorectal cancer, 15.0% for liver cancer and 58.3% for pancreatic cancer, while the combined rates increased to 51.9%, 70.6%, 75.0% and 66.7%, respectively. In an investigation of changes with time in NCC-ST-439 values during chemotherapy of various types of digestive tract cancer, there was a decrease in PR cases, no change in NC cases and a tendency to increase in PD cases. These results suggested that it was possible to apply NCC-ST-439 clinically.
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PMID:[Study on the clinical usefulness of NCC-ST-439 in cases of digestive tract cancer]. 221 36

Pathological sections of gastrectomized specimens of 74 patients with benign gastric ulcer and 79 with gastric cancer were reviewed. Intestinal metaplasia was found in 26 specimens with benign ulcer (35.1%) and in 43 with cancer (54.4%), a difference that is statistically significant. Further analysis of age groups showed that rate of occurrence of metaplasia in cancer patients older than 60 years was 70.3%, which was significantly higher than that of their younger counterparts (40.5%) and of patients with benign ulcer of either age group. A survey was also conducted by taking biopsies of mucosa of antrum and body of the stomach of 250 patients who underwent gastroscopic examinations. Acute and chronic gastritis was found in 22 and 156 patients, respectively. Intestinal metaplasia was found to be associated with acute gastritis in 2 (9.1%) and with chronic gastritis in 25 (16%) patients. In conclusion, intestinal metaplasia was associated with higher proportion than it was with benign gastric ulcer and gastritis among Thai patients.
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PMID:Occurrence of intestinal metaplasia of the stomach in Thai patients with gastritis, benign ulcer, and gastric cancer. 230 43

Ingested nitrate and nitrite have been shown to contribute to endogenous, N-nitroso compound formation in man and experimental animals. N-nitroso compounds have long been suspected of contributing to higher levels of gastric cancer in various populations. Reconstructive gastric surgery to treat ulcers is accompanied by a change in bile reflux, gastritis and an increased incidence of gastric cancer in humans. To evaluate possible connections between gastric nitrite processing, reconstructive surgery and gastric cancer, the surgically altered domestic ferret, Mustela putorius furo, was used as an experimental model. The aim of the study was to determine if surgery would alter the stomach in a way which would increase gastric nitrite concentration, and thereby enhance the likelihood of gastric N-nitroso compound formation. Three groups of ferrets, one control group (n = 6) and two groups of surgically altered ferrets, one to simulate maximal bile reflux (MABR, n = 6), and the other to model minimal bile reflux (MIBR, n = 7), were studied. Each group's response to an exogenously administered dose of sodium nitrite did not differ significantly with respect to rate of gastric nitrite absorption, with half-lives in the 13-min range. Permeability of gastric mucosa to nitrite did not differ between controls and MIBR ferrets. Mean doubling time of gastric nitrate appeared slowed in surgically altered ferrets. Mean rate of gastric emptying was the same in the three groups, but appeared delayed initially in MIBR ferrets. Thiocyanate concentrations, pH and HCl secretion, all parameters which have been shown to affect gastric nitrite processing, did not differ significantly between groups. Gastric mucosal endoscopic biopsies obtained at 6-month intervals showed no clear difference in degree of mucosal inflammation and/or dysplasia in the three groups. These findings indicate that gastric mucosal neoplasia has not occurred in this model and that changes in parameters favoring gastric N-nitrosation, even if relevant to the disease process, are not apparent at this time.
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PMID:Gastric nitrite processing in the surgically altered maximal and minimal bile reflux ferret model. 231 Nov 83

We attempted to verify if the reported association of gastric campylobacter like organisms (GCLO) with active antral gastritis holds true in our population. All patients undergoing elective upper endoscopy were eligible for the study unless they had a history of gastric cancer or previous antrectomy. Biopsy specimens from 100 consecutive patients were examined blindly for the presence of inflammatory activity and/or intestinal metaplasia. The presence of GCLO was determined by the acridine orange fluorescence technique. A total of 131 antral biopsies examined were classified as either normal, active gastritis, chronic gastritis with activity and chronic gastritis without activity. GCLO were identified in 84% of the biopsies with inflammatory activity (active gastritis and chronic gastritis with activity). However, GCLO were found only in 11% of those biopsies with chronic gastritis without activity. It is therefore our conclusion that the previously reported association of GCLO with active gastritis holds true for our population.
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PMID:Gastric campylobacter-like organisms and active antral gastritis in Puerto Rico. 232 49

The duodenogastric reflux (DGR) is a suspected cause in some esogastric pathologies in adults: esophagitis, peptic gastric ulcers, stress ulcers, ulcers secondary to drugs, gastric cancer, and gastritis. The toxic substances of the reflux are essentially bile acids, lysolecithin, and trypsin. A number of diagnostic methods have been proposed in the adult. This study suggests a diagnosis technique for DGR in the child. Fasting gastric juice was collected by gastric intubation during 1 h and three substances were measured: phospholipids as markers of biliary reflux, trypsin as a marker of pancreatic reflux, and sialic acid as a marker of the degradation of gastric mucus. The sialic acid enabled us to evaluate some of the toxicity of DGR on the stomach. The study of 49 child subjects permitted us to show the existence, in the normal child, of biliopancreatic markers in the stomach under fasting conditions through a physiological DGR; to define the norms in the child, varying according to three age groups: 0-2 months, 2-12 months, and 1-4 years (the maximum values for an age above 4 years seemed to correspond to those in the adult); and to suggest the existence of a pathological DGR in children with antral gastritis or ulcers.
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PMID:Duodenogastric reflux in children: measurement of phospholipids and trypsin in gastric content. 218 18

The progression, age-behaviour and profiles of chronic gastritis were studied in 460 patients with active gastric or duodenal ulcer, and in 226 patients with ulcer scar. The results were compared with those obtained from a sample of subjects representing the general population. In patients with ulcer or ulcer scar, the progression of chronic gastritis was more rapid in antrum than in body mucosa, and was more rapid in patients with proximal ulcer in those with distal ulcer or in controls. In the body the progression of gastritis was significantly slower in patients with duodenal or juxtapyloric ulcer than in patients with proximal ulcer or in nonulcer controls: body gastritis tended to remain on the same level at all ages whereas it showed a steady progression with age in the nonulcer controls. The degree of gastritis showed a tendency to increase along the shift of ulcer to more proximal in the stomach; the prevalence of gastritis of pure B type (moderate or severe atrophy in antrum, but no atrophy in body mucosa) correspondingly increased along this shift. Severe antral atrophic gastritis was found in 7 per cent of proximal active gastric ulcers and in 20 per cent of proximal ulcer scars. The progression of antral and body gastritis was on the whole more rapid in males than in females irrespectively of the location of ulcer. We conclude that gastritis in different types of ulcers shows characteristic patterns of distribution, dynamics and progression with age. The high prevalence of severe grades of atrophic antral gastritis may also be of significance in regard to the pathogenesis of gastric cancer.
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PMID:Peptic ulcer and chronic gastritis: their relation to age and sex, and to location of ulcer and gastritis. 234 9

We reviewed 29 patients who developed carcinomas of the gastric remnant more than 10 years after the initial gastrectomy. The median age was 59 years (29-75), with a male-to-female ratio of 3.8:1. The reason for previous operation was stomach ulcer in 16 patients, chronic gastritis in 2, stomach polyp in 2, duodenal ulcer in 5 and stomach cancer in 4 patients. Regarding the type of the original operations, Billroth's operation I (B-I) was performed for 10 patients, Billroth's II (B-II) for 18 and Roux-en Y operation for one. The site of tumor was classified into three groups, stoma (gastroenterostomy), stump (gastric cut-end except stoma) and others (the site except stoma and stump). The patients reconstructed with B-II developed significantly more carcinomas in the stoma than those reconstructed with B-I, with the incidence of 10/18 and 0/10, respectively (p less than 0.05). The interval between the initial operation and the second one was significantly longer in patients with stomal cancer than in those with stump cancer (p less than 0.05). There were no significant difference in the frequency and degree of histologic change, such as intestinal metaplasia or glandular cystification in noncancerous areas, between the B-I and B-II patients. This study suggested that cancers of the gastric remnant, especially those developed in the stoma after B-II were different from the other remnant cancers in terms of carcinogenesis or cancer promotion, and that they were probably induced by duodenogastric reflux to the gastrojejunostomized area.
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PMID:[A study on 29 patients with cancers of the gastric remnant--a speculation on a remnant cancer-promoting factor from the aspect of tumor location]. 235 90

The incidence of the Helicobacter-like organisms (HLO) was investigated on biopsy specimens of antral gastric mucosa, stained by the Wayson technique, in 509 patients with various gastric and duodenal diseases. The incidence of HLO was: 72.8 percent in gastric ulcer, 69.6 percent in duodenal ulcer, 69.2 percent in bulbitis, 61.0. percent in chronic gastritis, 37.5 percent in the postoperative stomach, 50 percent in gastric cancer, and 34.3 percent on healthy controls. The HLO were present over the whole year, with a peak in March. Sex and age had little influence on the HLO incidence. The Wayson staining technique proved to be a good technique of detection of HLO on gastric mucosa smears.
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PMID:Helicobacter-like organisms in gastroduodenal diseases. 236 75


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