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)

Using anti-ras p21 monoclonal antibodies, RASK-3, which reacts with all of Ki-, N-, and Ha-ras p21, we examined by immunohistochemistry the expression of p21 in human gastric cancer (80 cases) and benign gastric lesions (32 cases). Ten percent formalin fixed tissues were studied. Ras p21 was positive in 51 cases (64%) out of 80 cases and partially positive in 12 cases (15%) at the cancerous areas. Ras p21 was partially positive in 7 cases (9%) at the noncancer areas of the same slides. Intestinal metaplasia and normal parietal cells were also often positive. In the study of 32 cases of benign stomach lesions, 2 out of 3 cases of atypical hyperplasia (ATP) and 3 out of 11 cases of stomach ulcer with regenerating epithelials were positive. Ras p21 was more dominantly expressed in the well-differentiated type of stomach cancer than the poorly differentiated type. Expression of ras p21, however, was not correlated either with the grades of cancer invasion or with the types of cancer infiltration.
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PMID:Analysis of ras gene expression in stomach cancer by anti-ras p21 monoclonal antibodies. 305 35

Serum pepsinogen I and pepsinogen II levels in 369 healthy controls, 38 duodenal ulcer, 30 gastric ulcer and 46 stomach cancer including 21 early and 25 advanced gastric cancer patients were measured by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays using pepsin moiety-reacting monoclonal antibodies to pepsinogens I and II. Serum pepsinogen I and pepsinogen II levels were higher in the duodenal and gastric ulcer groups than in the control. Although there was no significant difference in serum pepsinogen II between stomach cancer and control, serum pepsinogen I was significantly lower in the former than in the latter and also in advanced gastric cancer than in early gastric cancer. A specific negative correlation of serum pepsinogen I with patient age was observed in stomach cancer but not in peptic ulcer or control groups. Receiver operating characteristic analysis was performed and indicated that serum pepsinogen I, compared with serum pepsinogen II or the pepsinogen I/pepsinogen II ratio, is the most effective marker for stomach cancer.
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PMID:Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays for serum pepsinogens I and II using monoclonal antibodies--with data on peptic ulcer and gastric cancer. 316 82

In two prospective studies, including a total of 1,353 and 1,914 male and female participants, a variety of medical and psychosocial risk factors were assessed by means of personal interviews and observational categories. The incidence of gastric cancer was determined for the following study groups: 1) all persons with chronic atrophic gastritis and pernicious anemia who had one to three relatives with a history of gastric cancer, 2) persons with a previous operation for gastric ulcer (partial resection) and one to three relatives with gastric cancer, and 3) a comparable group without any of these characteristics, serving as a reference. The hypothesis was that significantly more gastric cancer was to be expected in groups 1 and 2. A second hypothesis was that interaction between the specific precursors and psychosocial risk factors (chronic hopelessness due to withdrawing objects) was useful for the prediction of gastric cancer. The results may open new avenues for the prevention of gastric cancer via preventive psychotherapy in identified risk groups.
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PMID:Precursor lesions of the GI tract and psychosocial risk factors for prediction and prevention of gastric cancer. 322 43

Mucosal atrophy of the gastric antrum (type B atrophic gastritis) is generally accepted as predisposing to the development of the intestinal type of gastric cancer. Since bombesin stimulates gastrin release selectively from the antral mucosa, the response can be used as a marker for antral mucosal atrophy. In this study we have investigated bombesin-stimulated plasma gastrin responses in 21 patients with the intestinal type of gastric cancer and we have compared the results with 12 patients with the diffuse type of gastric cancer, 17 patients with benign gastric ulcer, and 30 dyspeptic patients without endoscopical or histological abnormalities. Gastrin concentrations were also measured in extracts of antral biopsies. Basal plasma gastrin concentrations were not significantly different. In contrast, patients with the intestinal type of gastric cancer had a significantly lower plasma gastrin response to bombesin than did the normal subjects (P less than 0.01) and patients with the diffuse type of gastric cancer (P less than 0.05), but the result was not significantly different from that of the gastric ulcer patients. The antral gastrin content of the patients with the intestinal type of gastric cancer was significantly lower than in controls (P less than 0.005), the patients with the diffuse type of gastric cancer (P less than 0.05), and those with gastric ulcer (P less than 0.05). It is concluded that patients with the intestinal type of gastric cancer have, in contrast to those with the diffuse type of gastric cancer, an abnormally low plasma gastrin response to bombesin. This low response is due to a reduced gastrin content of the antral mucosa.
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PMID:Plasma gastrin responses to bombesin and antral gastrin concentrations in patients with the intestinal type of gastric cancer. 334 93

A case-control investigation involving interviews with 564 stomach cancer patients and 1131 population-based controls was conducted to evaluate reasons for the exceptionally high rates of stomach cancer in Linqu, a rural county in Shandong Province in northeast China. Daily consumption of sour pancakes, a fermented indigenous staple, was associated with a 30% increase in risk. Risks of stomach cancer were also increased by 2- to 3-fold among persons with prior chronic gastritis or gastric ulcer, by 80% among those with stomach cancer in a family member, by 50% among men who smoked one or more packs of cigarettes/day, by 40% among those who preferred salty foods, and by 50% among families with moldy grain supplies. In contrast, risks tended to decrease in proportion to increasing consumption of fresh vegetables and fruits. This protective effect was more pronounced for vegetables, with those in the highest quartile of intake at less than one-half the risk of those in the lowest. Stomach cancer risks also declined with increasing dietary intake of carotene, vitamin C, and calcium, but not retinol. These findings provide leads to dietary factors that contribute to the high rates in Linqu, where stomach cancer is the leading cause of cancer and has not yet begun to decline as in other parts of the world.
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PMID:Diet and high risk of stomach cancer in Shandong, China. 337 Jun 45

Epidemiologic evidence shows a strong relationship between gastric cancer and cerebrovascular disease. It was speculated that salt intake might be the linking factor causing hypertension and vascular damage as well as damage to the gastric mucosa. This study tested whether hypertensive diseases, such as ischemic heart disease and cerebrovascular disease, occurred more frequently in patients with gastric cancer and gastric ulcer than expected by chance alone. In addition, it was studied whether gastric and duodenal ulcer coincided more frequently with other diseases that in the past have been associated with peptic ulcer, such as liver cirrhosis, chronic lung disease, and rheumatoid arthritis. The German statistics of rehabilitation were used to assess the frequency of coincidences. The statistics include a description of the primary, secondary, and tertiary diagnoses leading to rehabilitation. This study confirms the presence of a high coincidence of both ulcer types with liver cirrhosis. In patients with rheumatoid arthritis, both ulcer types also occurred more frequently than expected from their general distribution. Gastric but not duodenal ulcer coincided more frequently with ischemic heart disease than expected. Gastric cancer occurred more frequently in patients who had concomitant ischemic heart disease or cerebrovascular disease. Duodenal ulcer was not associated with an increased risk for any disease related to hypertension. The results of the study support the contention that gastric diseases and diseases related to hypertension share a common etiologic factor.
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PMID:Concordant occurrence of gastric and hypertensive diseases. 337 23

We followed for 25 to 33 years 6459 patients who had undergone partial gastrectomy for benign ulcer disease to determine the incidence of stomach cancer. The overall risk was no different from that among sex- and age-matched controls from the Swedish Cancer Registry (standardized incidence ratio = 0.96; 95 percent confidence limits, 0.78 and 1.16). However, when the patients were classified according to the duration of follow-up after operation, sex, surgical procedure, diagnosis at the time of operation, and age at operation, differences in risk were observed between the subgroups. After adjustment for potential confounding variables, the average adjusted risk increased 28 percent (adjusted standardized incidence ratio = 1.28; 95 percent confidence limits, 1.11 and 1.49) for each successive five-year interval after operation. The adjusted risk was greater among women than men (adjusted standardized incidence ratio = 1.96; 95 percent confidence limits, 1.18 and 3.24). Patients who had undergone a Billroth I anastomosis had a lower crude risk, both overall (standardized incidence ratio = 0.40; 95 percent confidence limits, 0.20 and 0.71) and after we controlled for other confounding variables (adjusted standardized incidence ratio = 0.27; 95 percent confidence limits, 0.12 and 0.62), than did those who had undergone a Billroth II procedure. The adjusted risk of stomach cancer was greater among patients operated on for gastric ulcer than among those operated on for duodenal ulcer (adjusted standardized incidence ratio = 2.21; 95 percent confidence limits, 1.45 and 3.35). Risk decreased with increased age at operation. Between successive strata of age at operation (less than 39, 40 to 49, 50 to 59, and greater than or equal to 60 years of age), the adjusted risk decreased on the average by about half (adjusted standardized incidence ratio = 0.52; 95 percent confidence limits, 0.41 and 0.66).
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PMID:Stomach cancer after partial gastrectomy for benign ulcer disease. 339 71

An analysis of roentgenological and endoscopic signs of "malignancy" in 107 patients with "ulcerous" forms of early gastric cancer and symptoms in patients of the control group (54 patients) with chronic gastric ulcer was performed by the same specialists. These signs were shown to be not reliable. It was only the biopsy, sometimes repeated, followed by cytological and histological examinations of the material, which managed to make a surely correct preoperative diagnosis in 94.4% of patients with the early stage of gastric cancer.
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PMID:[Differential diagnosis of ulcerated forms of early cancer of the stomach]. 340 71

The pathologic features and five-year survival of patients in whom gastric cancer masquerades at endoscopy as a benign gastric ulcer has been poorly characterized. We reviewed retrospectively all cases of gastric adenocarcinoma in three hospitals for a five-year period. Of 266 patients with gastric adenocarcinoma, 169 (63.5%) had endoscopy with biopsy prior to diagnosis of cancer. In 159 of these 169 patients (94.1%), the endoscopic findings suggested cancer, while in the remaining 10 patients (5.9%) the endoscopic appearance suggested benign ulcer. In six of these 10 patients, the initial endoscopic biopsies did not reveal cancer and correct diagnosis was delayed for as long as 14 months. Three of the 10 patients had "early gastric cancer" by pathologic criteria at gastrectomy, although one had lymph node metastasis. The other seven patients had pathologic criteria for advanced gastric cancer, and three had lymph node metastasis. In spite of advanced cancer and/or lymph node metastasis in eight of our 10 patients, five-year survival in these patients with benign-appearing ulcers was 70%, as compared to 17% in patients whose gastric lesions appeared malignant at endoscopy.
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PMID:Gastric adenocarcinoma masquerading endoscopically as benign gastric ulcer. A five-year experience. 340 91

The activity levels of sulfotransferase enzymes involved in the transfer of sulfate from 3'-phosphoadenosine 5'-phosphosulfate to mucosal membrane and mucus gel glycolipids were studied in fundic and antral mucosal biopsies of patients with severe and chronic gastritis, gastric atrophy, gastric ulcer, and gastric cancer. With sulfotransferase which catalyzes the sulfation of mucus triglucosyl glyceroglucolipid increase in enzyme activity over the control was observed in patients with chronic and severe gastritis, and gastric atrophy, while a decrease in activity was noted in patients with gastric ulcer and gastric cancer. The differences were significant at p less than 0.001 for severe gastritis, gastric ulcer and gastric cancer. The increase in activity of sulfotransferase enzyme involved in the sulfation of membrane galactosylceramide over the control was observed in antral and fundic mucosa of all patients. Significant (p less than 0.001) differences were found in patients with severe gastritis, gastric atrophy and gastric ulcer. The results indicate that considerable changes in the activities of the mucosal sulfotransferase enzymes involved in the synthesis of membrane and secretory sulfolipids occur in gastric disease.
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PMID:Sulfation of glycolipids by human gastric mucosa in disease. 347 28


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