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)

In the pediatric population, the associations of Helicobacter pylori with gastritis, gastric ulcer, duodenitis and duodenal ulcer, and with duodenal gastric surface metaplasia and disorders of the D cell- G cell axis resulting in hypergastrinemia, are well established and in many ways resemble their counterparts in adults. Eradication of H pylori invariably results in the reversal of these diseases with time. There are also suggestions that gastric surface metaplasia is more extensive in children with H pylori, and may be the site of duodenal H pylori infection and associated duodenal erosions or ulcers. There is no consensus as to whether H pylori in children is more or less severe than in adults. In one pediatric cohort, H pylori was associated with increased intensity of inflammation, while other studies suggest that acute inflammation may be less intense in children overall but that chronic inflammation may be increased in intensity, including lymphoid hyperplasia, which in turn may correlate with endoscopic nodularity. Lymphoid hyperplasia and nodular gastritis appear to be more frequent in children than in adults and usually regress following H pylori eradication. However, in children, other diseases or morphological abnormalities, including some loss of glands (atrophy), occasionally intestinal metaplasia, lymphoproliferative diseases including low grade mucosal-associated lymphoid tissue lymphoma, lymphocytic gastritis and hypertrophic gastritis/Menetrier's disease, are much less frequently associated with H pylori than in adults. Other associations are rarely seen in children, primarily because the time required for these to develop takes the individual to adulthood; for example, while intestinal metaplasia occurs in the pediatric population, the complications of adenoma/dysplasia and carcinoma are rare. In adults, inflammatory and hyperplastic polyps, atrophic gastritis and pernicious anemia, and in some patients granulomas (granulomatous gastritis), may also be associated with H pylori infection. Greater awareness of the spectrum of diseases associated with H pylori may well lead to their increased recognition in the pediatric population. Some diseases, particularly Crohn's disease, but also human immunodeficiency virus infection, have a negative association with H pylori that appears not to be simply a result of the excess antibiotic therapy that these patients receive. These variations in association and reactions to H pylori, some of which are age-related, may allow the different host responses to H pylori that occur in humans to be examined.
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PMID:Pathobiology of Helicobacter pylori infection in children. 1051 59

Strongyloides stercoralis is an intestinal helminth of systemic distribution, which, once in its host, has the ability to perpetuate itself through an autoinfection cycle, leading to chronic infection. In healthy hosts, the parasite usually does not cause any symptoms, or only mild symptoms that are limited mainly to the small intestine. However, in immunocompromised hosts, uncontrolled multiplication with massive infection may occur, causing hyperinfection syndrome or disseminated strongyloidiasis, which are both associated with high morbidity and mortality. There are few reports of gastric involvement, particularly presenting as ulcer in the stomach. We report a case of gastric ulcer caused by S. stercoralis in HIV-infected patient.
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PMID:Atypical gastric presentation of strongyloidiasis in HIV-infected patient--case report. 1557 Oct 7

The prevalence of H. pylori infection in AIDS patients has been controversial. A. controlled prospective and descriptive study was conducted in a group of 64 HIV-infested patients. H. pylori detection was carried out by endoscopic study during which two biopsy samples of gastric antrum and body were taken for the histologic study and other 2 samples of gastric antrum and body for urease testing. H.pylori infection prevalence was 56.3%. The comparison group was composed by 110 serologically HIV-negative patients, with an infection prevalence rate of 77.2%. In the HIV-AIDS group, the frequency of gastric ulcer was 1,5% and no duodenal ulcer was found whereas the comparison group showed a frequency of gastric and duodenal ulcers of 1.8 and 15.5% respectively. HIV+/AIDS patients in category I exhibited an H. pylori infection prevalence of 68.7%, category II, 39.2% and category III, 21,0%. A reversed association was observed between the level of immune deterioration and the prevalence of H. pylori infection.
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PMID:[Helicobacter pylori infection in a group of HIV/AIDS patients]. 1584 24

The paper presents the diagnostic features of 95 cases with complicated forms of abdominal tuberculosis (AT). The latter has been found to be concurrent with disseminated progressive pulmonary tuberculosis in 97.3% of cases. HIV infection is present in 25.2% of the patients. In 42.1%, a complication of AT is its first onset. The late diagnosis of AT in the phase of development of complications is due to its asymptomatic course at the early stage, the similarity of clinical manifestations with various nonspecific abdominal diseases, the low informative value of radiodiagnostic techniques, and scanty bacterial excretion. In this connection, AT is detectable in 92.6% with the development of acute surgical abdominal pathology requiring emergency diagnostic laparoscopy and surgery. Among all acute surgical abdominal diseases, complicated abdominal tuberculosis ranks third, which in the presence of any abdominal symptoms, particularly those concurrent with pulmonary tuberculosis needs examination for abdominal tuberculosis. Various surgical interventions (more commonly right-sided hemicolectomy, enterectomy, and abdominal abscess lancing) were made in 92 patients with complicated abdominal tuberculosis. There were intraoperative complications, such as perforated tuberculous intestinal ulcers (54.7%), ileus (30.5), abdominal and retroperitoneal abscesses (11.6%), as well as other rare complications, such as intestinal hemorrhage, perforated tuberculous gastric ulcer, and splenic abscess (3.2%). In 42.1% of cases, surgery was ineffective and it was followed by the development of recurrent complications that required surgery. In HIV-infected patients, AT ran more severely. Overall mortality in patients with AT was 47.4%, that in patients with and without HIV infection was 58.3 and 43.7%, respectively.
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PMID:[The clinical picture and diagnosis of complicated forms of abdominal tuberculosis]. 1906 70

Phlegmonous gastritis is an uncommon local or diffuse bacterial infection of the stomach wall. It is an extremely rare disease with a fulminating course and a high mortality rate. A majority of cases are diagnosed only postmortem, and early diagnosis is crucial for survival. This used to be common in the preantibiotic era; a resurgence of cases has occurred of late due to the spread of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. There are varying local and systemic associations like gastric ulcer, gastric carcinoma, post-therapeutic endoscopy, postsurgery, human immunodeficiency virus infection, malnutrition, Kaposi's sarcoma, myeloma, leukemia, Sjogren's syndrome, and glucocorticoid use. We report a case of phlegmonous gastritis in a 70-year-old lady associated with gastric lymphoma. She succumbed to death on the fifth day of hospitalization despite broad-spectrum antibiotic therapy. She could not be operated upon due to the onset of multiorgan dysfunction syndrome and multiple comorbidities. To our knowledge, gastric lymphoma presenting as phlegmonous gastritis has not been reported in published English literature.
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PMID:Gastric lymphoma presenting as phlegmonous gastritis. 1906 19

Cytomegalovirus infection is an important cause of morbidity in immunosupressed patients with Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV). In this paper we present a 43 years old man with renal failure under hemodialysis, several blood transfusions because of anemia and three months of disease characterized by epigastric pain, specially at nights, ameliorated with antacid drugs. Other symptoms were early satisfy, vomits and weigh loss (18Kg). At clinical exam, the patient was pallid, presented adenopathies at cervical and inguinal regions and had a pain at epigastric region in profound touch palpation. The most important exams were HB: 10mg/dl, CMV: 83.5, leukocytes 7000, lymphocytes: 1715, erythrocyte sedimentation rate 49mm/h, the venon test (-), and Giardia lamblia trophozoites in stools. The studies demonstrated the patient was seropositive for HIV and the tests for IgG CMV and IgG Herpes virus resulted seropositives too. At endoscopy the esophagus mucosa was covered by a white plaque which suggests candida infection. In the stomach, over the body gastric, we found a big and deep ulcerated lesion (45 x 41mm), with defined rims and white fund. Biopsy from the edges of the gastric ulcer had the characteristic CMV intranuclear and intracytoplasmic inclusions; we confirmed the diagnosis by immunohystochemistry. The patient receives ganciclovir an then HAART and is getting well.
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PMID:[Giant gastric ulcer by cytomegalovirus in infection VIH/SIDA]. 1915 83

Herpes simplex infection is characterized by acute or subacute infection, often followed by a chronic carrier state. Consecutive recurrences may flare up if immunocompromise occurs. Herpes simplex associated esophagitis or duodenal ulcer have been reported in immunocompromised patients due to neoplasm, HIV/AIDS or therapeutically induced immune deficiency. Here we report the case of an HSV-DNA seronegative patient who developed grade III dysphagia 13 days after allogeneic liver transplantation. Endoscopy revealed an esophageal-gastric ulcer, and biopsy histopathology showed a distinct fibroplastic and capillary ulcer pattern highly suspicious for viral infection. Immunohistochemistry staining revealed a distinct nuclear positive anti-HSV reaction. Antiviral therapy with acyclovir and high-dose PPI led to a complete revision of clinical symptoms within 48 h. Repeat control endoscopy after 7 days showed complete healing of the former ulcer site at the gastroesophageal junction. Although the incidence of post-transplantation Herpes simplex induced gastroesophageal disease is low, the viral HSV ulcer may be included into a differential diagnosis if dysphagia occurs after transplantation even if HSV-DNA PCR is negative.
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PMID:Seronegative Herpes simplex Associated Esophagogastric Ulcer after Liver Transplantation. 2149 Aug 47

Glycyrrhizic acid (GA), a triterpene isolated from the roots and rhizomes of licorice, named Glycyrrhiza glabra, is the principal bioactive ingredient of anti-viral, anti-inflammatory and hepatoprotective effects. GA has been used in the clinical treatment of hepatitis, bronchitis, gastric ulcer, AIDS (acquired immunodeficiency syndrome), certain cancers and skin diseases. It has a direct effect on anti-HBV (hepatitis B virus) via affecting the HBsAg (hepatitis B surface antigen) to extracellular secretion, improving liver dysfunction in patients with chronic hepatitis B, and ultimately improving the immune status of HBV. GA can significantly inhibit the proliferation of HIV, showing an immune activation. The clinical application of GA on the prevention and treatments of various diseases may derive from its numerous pharmacological properties. This review provides the summary of the antiviral effects of GA on research progress and mechanism in recent years.
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PMID:Research Progress of Glycyrrhizic Acid on Antiviral Activity. 3065 37