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)

The expression of carbohydrate antigens in malignant and non-malignant gastric mucosa was studied immunohistochemically using the monoclonal antibody AH6 directed to Ley antigen, FH2 directed to Lex antigen, and FH6 directed to sialyl-Lex antigen. Formalin-fixed gastric tissue resected from 54 patients with gastric cancer and 20 patients with gastric ulcer were tested. The incidence of positive cases in gastric cancer patients with each antibody was as follows: AH6;85%, FH2;74%, FH6;74%. The Lex antigen was expressed in 81.5% of cases histologically classified as undifferentiated type, and 66.7% of cases classified as differentiated type. It was expressed in a higher incidence in early stage cancer (93.3%) than in advanced stage cancer (66.7%). Sialyl-Lex antigen was detected in more cases of differentiated type (88.9%) than in those of undifferentiated type (59.3%), whereas none of 8 early cancers of undifferentiated type expressed the antigen. The incidence of the expression of Ley antigen did not differ in relation to histological type or invasiveness. Lex and Ley antigens were detected in noncancerous gastric epithelium. Sialyl-Lex antigen was not detected in the normal fundic gland region. These results demonstrate that Lex antigen may be a differentiation-associated antigen, and sialyl-Lex antigen might be useful as a marker of differentiated cancer and an indication for invasion of undifferentiated cancer.
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PMID:Immunohistochemical study of carbohydrate antigen expression in gastric carcinoma. 266 6

Thyroid status was evaluated in 265 patients with gastric pathology. The degree of tissue triiodothyronine (T3) deficiency was assessed versus stage and histologic pattern of tumor. Also, it was measured before and after surgery. No correlation was found in gastric cancer patients between T3 concentration, degree of blood--T3 level decrease and tissue T3 deficiency, on the one hand, and stage and histologic pattern of tumor, radical surgery and postoperative treatment, on the other. Said T3 parameters differed significantly in cases of chronic gastritis, gastric ulcer and polyps.
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PMID:[Deficiency of the triiodothyronine pool in patients with stomach cancer]. 270 12

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.
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PMID:Vitamin C in the human stomach: relation to gastric pH, gastroduodenal disease, and possible sources. 271 77

The complement titer, bactericidal serum activity and cation protein content of the peripheral blood granulocytes in gastric cancer, polyps and gastric ulcer disease were studied in dynamics. The most decrease in the indices listed was noted in patients with stage IV gastric cancer. The results of the tests mentioned permit to judge about the state of the non-specific resistance of the body of patients with gastric cancer, and in the complex with the other clinico-laboratory findings are of prognostic value.
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PMID:[Dynamics of indices of the natural resistance of patients with cancer of the stomach]. 275 62

The presence of Campylobacter pylori was studied in biopsy material from gastric mucosa taken by guided biopsy during fiber gastroduodenoscopy from 101 patients with chronic gastritis (n = 50), peptic gastric ulcer (n = 28), peptic duodenal ulcer (n = 7), gastric cancer (n = 10) and gastric polyposis (n = 6). Campylobacter pylori was found in various quantity--moderate (++) and considerable ( )--in 64% of the patients with chronic gastritis, in 85.7% of the patients with peptic gastric ulcer and in 100% of the patients with peptic duodenal ulcer as well as in half of the patients with gastric cancer and polyposis. The quantity of Campylobacter pylori correlated with the severity of the inflammatory process and the degree of atrophy of the gastric antral mucosa. A tendency toward seasonal incidence of Campylobacter pylori infection of gastric mucosa was established: 78.69% of the patients examined during spring time (April-May) and 60.0% of the patients examined during winter time (January-February) had Campylobacter pylori infection. This explains to a certain extent the seasonal exacerbations of the pathological process in chronic gastritis and peptic ulcer. The development of a well expressed chronic atrophic gastritis is in direct relation with the greater quantity of Campylobacter pylori in the gastric mucosa. The study reveals the pathogenetic relations between the presence and quantity of Campylobacter pylori and the development and evolution of chronic gastritis and peptic gastric and duodenal ulcer.
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PMID:[Campylobacter pylori in patients with chronic gastritis and gastric and duodenal peptic ulcer]. 276 25

To investigate the prevalence of Campylobacter pylori (CP) and its association with histological inflammatory grading and intestinal metaplasia, biopsies were carried out in 388 patients with gastro-duodenal diseases from 2 sites in the stomach (body and antrum). In each case, 3 biopsy specimens were taken from each site for culture, acridine orange stain and urease test. CP was detected in 55% of 22 endoscopically normal patients, in 47% of 17 gastric cancer patients, in 73% of 205 gastritis patients in 91% of 99 gastric ulcer patients and in 100% of 45 duodenal ulcer patients. In gastric ulcer and duodenal ulcer patients, CP detection rate was significantly higher than in endoscopically normal patients (p less than 0.01). There was no difference in CP detection rate irrespective of ulcer stage (active, healing or scar). According to the histological gradings of inflammation (Warren's criteria), CP was detected in only 3% in grade 0-I, 20% in grade II and 83% in grade III. It was found that a close association between CP and histological gastritis with polymorphonuclear leukocytes infiltration exists (p less than 0.001). In a few cases, CP was found even in the areas of intestinal metaplasia. But the number of CP in the areas of intestinal metaplasia were fewer than in the areas of surrounding inflamed gastric mucosa. In most cases, CP was not seen in the areas of intestinal metaplasia, but was found in the areas of surrounding inflamed gastric mucosa in the same biopsy specimen.
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PMID:[Campylobacter pylori in gastro-duodenal diseases, with special reference to endoscopic diagnosis, histological inflammatory grading, and intestinal metaplasia]. 279 52

The presence of Campylobacter pylori was investigated in biopsy specimens obtained during gastrofiberscopy from 103 consecutive patients prospectively. Patients included 25 with gastric ulcer, 4 with duodenal ulcer, 5 with coexisting gastroduodenal ulcer, 31 with gastroduodenal ulcer with gastritis, 27 with gastritis, 3 with gastric polyps and 8 with gastric cancer. Results were compared with 20 healthy control subjects who were endoscopically normal. Two specimens each were taken from 3 sites in the stomach. One part was used for a histological study to examine the presence of the organisms. The other part was cultured using Skirrow's agar microaerophilically. Conventional microflora and C. pylori were examined in gastric contents of some cases. Bacteriological features of isolated strains of C. pylori were identical to the NCTC strain. C. pylori was the most dominant organism in gastric contents at any pH level. Detection rates of C. pylori by bacteriological culture were 96% in gastric ulcer, 100% in duodenal ulcer, 80% in coexisting gastroduodenal ulcer, 84% in gastroduodenal ulcer with gastritis, 70% in gastritis, 100% in gastric polyps and 100% in gastric cancer, and the percentages recognized by histological studies were 81, 100, 100, 84, 71, 67, and 57%, respectively. The values in healthy controls were 55% by histological and bacteriological methods (P less than 0.001 compared with overall ulcer patients). These results supported the close association between C. pylori and gastroduodenal diseases.
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PMID:Campylobacter pylori in Japan: bacteriological feature and prevalence in healthy subjects and patients with gastroduodenal disorders. 280 29

Campylobacter pylori causes type B gastritis and C. pylori infection has been associated with duodenal ulcer, gastric ulcer, non-ulcer dyspepsia, and gastric cancer. Although we have been able to culture C. pylori for only about 5 years, what we now know about this organism can explain many mysteries surrounding peptic ulcer disease. Whenever one investigates a population of ulcer patients for the presence of any accepted potentially important pathogenetic factors, one finds that the population of patients with duodenal ulcer disease differs (statistically) from those without duodenal ulcer disease, but that to a large degree they also overlap. None of the traditional factors can be considered essential and characteristic of chronic duodenal ulcer. The exception is the presence of a C. pylori infection, the presence of which is almost invariable. Several properties of C. pylori have been identified that might be virulence factors, including (a) provoking a marked acute and chronic inflammatory response, (b) rapid motility through gastric mucus, (c) urease activity, (d) a fibrillar adhesin(s), (e) several putative exotoxins, and (f) microinvasion. We can now add to the old dictum "no acid-no ulcer," "no C. pylori-no ulcer" at least as far as chronic duodenal ulcer disease in adults is concerned.
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PMID:Campylobacter pylori. The organism and its clinical relevance. 280 38

When compared with a matched population group, 4466 ulcer patients who had had gastric surgery between 1940 and 1960 showed no difference in the risk of death from gastric cancer in the first 20 years of follow-up but a 4.5-fold increase thereafter. In duodenal ulcer patients there was an initial decrease in risk followed by a 3.7-fold increase after 20 or more years. Since the initial decrease was seen only in the gastrectomy patients and not in those who had truncal vagotomy and drainage, it may have been due to the reduction in mucosal surface. The increased risk 20 years after duodenal ulcer surgery was greater in vagotomy patients than in gastrectomy patients. In gastric ulcer patients a 3.0-fold increase in risk for the first 20 years rose to a 5.5-fold increase thereafter. After 20 years, patients treated with the Bilroth II operation were at higher risk than those treated with Bilroth I, consistent with a role for bile reflux in gastric carcinogenesis. The finding that the risk differs according to original pathology and type of operation may explain the discrepancies between previous studies.
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PMID:Mortality from gastric cancer following gastric surgery for peptic ulcer. 287 Dec 38

A method of a combined use of fiber gastroscopy and x-ray fluorescent analysis was elaborated for a study of the chemical composition of the gastric mucosa. Fr, Cu, Zn, Br, and Rb concentrations were determined in gastric mucosa biopsy specimens obtained during fiber gastroscopy, using x-ray fluorescent analysis. The concentrations of trace elements in the gastric mucosa were determined in 13 healthy persons, in 23 patients with chronic mucosal atrophy, in 15--with gastric ulcer, and in 16--with polyps. Besides, the content of trace elements was determined in the tumorous tissue of 66 gastric cancer patients. The results of the investigation revealed a statistically significant rise of mean Fr concentrations on the ulcer edge, in polyps and tumorous tissue as compared to the unchanged mucosa. Polypous tissue differed from the normal gastric mucosa by a low level of Cu, the difference being statistically significant. A tendency to a decrease in Zn content as compared to the unchanged mucosa was noted in the edge of ulcerative defects. The method can be effectively used for intravital studies on Fr, Cu, Zn, Br, and Rb levels in the G. I. tract mucosa.
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PMID:[X-ray fluorescent determination of iron, copper, zinc, bromine and rubidium in biopsies of the gastric mucosa]. 291 28


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