Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0038358 (gastric ulcer)
5,179 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Gastric juice was neutralized (nGJ) in vivo by 80 ml of a phosphate buffer containing radiolabelled vitamin B12 as dilution indicator. Unprocessed nGJ was analyzed in the double gel diffusion technique for the presence of serum proteins using monospecific antisera. Alpha1-Acid glycoprotein (AGP) was found in a high incidence (36 out of 38 subjects) in nGJ of gastric cancer patients. AGP was also observed less frequently in nGJ of patients with Billroth II resections (6/15), metaplasia (11/52), gastric ulcer (3/24), chronic atrophic gastritis (2/26) and chronic gastritis (3/63). AGP was absent in the control group (0/21), in patients with surface gastritis (0/38) and in subjects with normal acid secretion (0/45). Immunochemical studies demonstrated no identity of AGP with human "gastrointestinal tumor associated antigens." In 7 out of 17 AGP positive samples immunochemical differences between gastric and serum AGP were observed.
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PMID:Alpha 1-acid glycoprotein in gastric cancer juice. 80 43

In spite of reduction in mortality, gastric carcinoma is still one of the most frequent types of carcinoma. For this reason precanceroses - pernicious anemia and diffuse adenomatous polyposis of the stomach - must be particularly watched. Whether gastric ulcer and chronic gastritis are precanceroses is discussed. Clinical aspects, therapy and prognosis are described in detail.
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PMID:[Gastric carcinoma (author's transl)]. 81 83

The indication for the non-resecting combination method arises if the presence of genuine ulcer disease is confirmed by complete diagnostic measures (history, roentgenologic examination, endoscopy, secretion analysis and possibly psychic testing). An extended indication exists for erosive gastritis with hypersecretion, for hiatal hernia with reflux esophagitis (Berman's syndrome), for cardiospasm and prophylaxis of hemorrhage. The technique yields permanent curative results if a complete selective proximal vagotomy is combined with a pyloroplasty suitable in form and function. This is also true for duodenal ulcer. In 22% of cases of gastric ulcer, selective vagotomy with antrectomy is necessary.
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PMID:[Non-resecting surgery for gastroduodenal ulcer. II. Indication and technique (author's transl)]. 81 5

During the last 12 years, 1489 vagotomies were performed at the Chirurgische Poliklinik of Munich University; 1339 of them were selective proximal vagotomies (SPV). The main indication was duodenal ulcer (n = 915) and gastric ulcer (n = 188), including emergency operations for extensive bleeding. Further indications were: sliding hiatal hernia, erosive gastritis and achalasia of the cardia. The SPA was combined in all cases with a pyloroplasty based on form and function. The results are shown in detail related to mortality (elective 0.5%), recurrency (1.6%) and functional results (good 88.2%, fair 7.2%, poor 4.6%). The combined operation of SPV with pyloroplasty is, in our opinion, an operative procedure which allows non resectioning surgical treatment of GDU without selection, i.e. based on form and function.
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PMID:[Non-resecting surgery for gastroduodenal ulcer. III. Clinical results (author's transl)]. 81 6

1. Prostaglandin A-, prostaglandin E- and prostaglandin F-like substances were determined radioimmunologically in antral biopsy material obtained by endoscopy. 2. In patients with gastritis, the concentrations of prostaglandin (E+A)-like substances were six times as high and of prostaglandin F-like substances twice as high as in normal subjects. In chronic atrophic gastritis, the concentrations of prostaglandin (E+A)-like material was four times as high as in normal subjects whereas prostaglandin-F like material remained unchanged. In acute gastric ulcer, prostaglandin (E+A)-like material reached concentrations four times times higher than in normal subjects, accompanied by a fivefold increase of prostglandin F-like substances. After healing of the gastric ulcer, prostaglandins returned to normal values. 3. There was no correlation between gastrin and prostaglandins in all biopsy specimens.
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PMID:Concentrations of prostaglandin A-, E- and F-like substances in gastric mucosa of normal subjects and of patients with various gastric diseases. 84 56

Duodenogastric reflux is a pathophysiological phenomen occurring after motility disturbances on the antroduodenal junction and after operative procedures destroying, removing or bypassing the pylorus. The reflux of bile can lead to a symptomatic chronicatrophic gastritis and is an important factor in the pathogenesis of gastric ulcer type I. The pyloric regurgitation test, marking of the bile with Bromsulphalein or 14C-chenodesoxycholic acid are reliable methods to prove reflux. For treatment of bile reflux and postoperative alkaline reflux gastritis substances augmenting antral peristalsis and binding bile acids can be used. More effective are surgical procedures diverting the bile flow from the stomach or the gastric remnant.
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PMID:[Duodenogastric reflux]. 87 Oct 59

Samples of gastric contents from 152 patients with pyloric reflex were taken during gastroscopy after an overnight fast and examined for hemolytic activity. Hemolysis was induced by 97 specimens (64%). The hemolysis test was positive in 45% of patients with a histologically normal gastric mucosa, in 76% of patients suffering from chronic atrophic gastritis with intestinal metaplasia, in 83% with gastric erosions and in 67% with gastric ulcer. No lysolecithin was found in 9 of the 97 positive specimens. The other aspirates contained widely differing values up to 320 mg/100 ml. The average quantities of lysolecithin in gastric contents varied in the different patient groups from 20 to 60 mg/100 ml. These values are much higher than the mean value of 0.9 mg/100 ml quantified in patients without pyloric reflex during an earlier investigation. It is now widely accepted that pyloric reflex promotes gastritis. Furthermore, it has been shown on several occasions that bile constituents exert a damaging effect on the gastric mucosa barrier. The same is true of lysolecithin, which promotes (for example) acute cholecystitis under experimental conditions. These findings, together with the results of our investigation, seem to afford evidence that lysolecithins may exert a pathogenic influence in the development of different gastric lesions.
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PMID:[Hemolysis-inducing substances in gastric secretion, incidence-rate of lysolecithin]. 89 30

Iceland (IS) and Denmark (DK) are ethnically, culturally, and economically closely related Nordic countries, but gastric cancer is much more frequent in Iceland, and other differences in the occurrence rates of gastric diseases are also suspected. Therefore a cooperative study was initiated comparing Icelandic and Danish patients with gastric ulcer (GU), duodenal ulcer (DU), and X-ray negative dyspepsia (XND) as regards clinical features, external factors of possible importance for gastritis and cancer, gastroscopic appearance, and histological gastric mucosal changes. The project lasted one year and comprised 93 Icelandic and 88 Danish patients. A large number of comparisons showed a high degree of similarity between Icelandic and Danish patients. Significant differences were found in tobacco consumption (DK greater than IS), duration of symptoms in XND (IS greater than DK), whereas the positon ratio of GU (IS less than DK) and acetylsalicylic acid consumption (DK greater than IS) showed non-significant trends. Significant difference was found between the occurrence of diffuse macroscopic changes of the gastric mucosa (IS greater than DK), which corresponds to the histological differences to be described in a subsequent article.
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PMID:A prospective comparative study of clinical and histological characteristics in Icelandic and Danish patients with gastric ulcer, duodenal ulcer, and X-ray negative dyspepsia. I. Design and clinical features. 92 8

The relationship between chronic gastritis and peptic ulcer was studied in 97 patients, 51 with duodenal ulcer and 46 with gastric ulcer. Six biopsies (three from the antrum and three from the body) were obtained under direct vision by means of an Olympus panendoscope. Chronic gastritis was classified according to the grade of inflammation (slight or moderate and intense), and to its location (antritis or pangastritis). In gastric ulcer the relationship between frequency of chronic gastritis and the site of the ulcer (antrapyloric, at the angulus, body of the stomach) was also established. Antritis was just as frequently observed in duodenal ulcer (94%) as in gastric patients (96%), but severe inflammation of the antrum was higher in G.U. (43%) than in D.U. (17%). Chronic gastritis of the gastric body was always accompanied by antritis, both in G.U. and in D.U. and was observed in 63% of the former group and 37% of the latter. Severe inflammation of the glandular portion of the stomach occurred in only one patient with D.U (2%) and in 7 with G. U (15%). In the present investigation, no relationship between between the site of gastric ulcer and the frequency of chronic gastritis was observed.
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PMID:Chronic gastritis and peptic ulcer. 93 May 40

The mean concentration of gastrin in serum was determined in healthy fasting persons (n = 27), it amounted to 56.8 pg/ml (SD = 19.8 PG/ML). The values of gastrin in serum of patients, who were grouped by endoscopicbioptic criteria of antral mucosa and who exceptionally showed diffuse inflammation of gastric mucosa, amounted to 73.2 pg/ml in patients with mild superficial gastritis (n = 24), to 73.4 pg/ml in those with severe superficial gastritis (n = 55), to 82.3 pg/ml in patients with chronic atrophic gastritis (n = 11) and to 70.7 pg/ml in those with chronic atrophic gastritis and intestinal metaplasia (n = 17). The concentration of serum gastrin in patients with additional pathological processes of gastric or duodenal mucosa was also determined. Patients with gastric resection according to Billroth II (n = 15) revealed gastrin values of 47.8 pg/ml, those with duodenal ulcer (n = 5) of 58.5 pg/ml, with gastric ulcer (n = 50) of 61.3 pg/ml, with polyps in stomach (n = 10) of 109.6 pg/ml and with neoplasms of the stomach (n = 27) of 77.7 pg/ml. Gastrin values were not correlated to age or sex. The difference between the mean gastrin concentrations of the mentioned groups of patients however is not marked enough and the range of values is too wide to characterize those groups by specific gastrin levels. The determination of gastrin in serum of fasting patients is not helpful for diagnosis of gastritis without antibodies to intrinsic factor or for diagnosis of certain localized pathological conditions in stomach or duodenum obviously.
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PMID:[Serum gastrin levels in patients with changes of gastric or duodenal mucosa (author's transl)]. 93 97


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