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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0038358 (
gastric ulcer
)
5,179
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Calcitonin (CT) inhibits basal and pentagastrin stimulated gastric acid and pepsin secretion by 60 to 70% when CT is infused over a short period of time. Vagal and histamine-mediated stimulations are less diminished. A long-term infusion of CT inhibits persitently basal and pentagastrin-stimulated acid and pepsin secretion over more than 24 hours in patients with duodenal ulcer, stress bleeding and Zollinger-Ellison-
Syndrome
. To date, the therapeutic efficiency of CT in gastroduodenal bleeding has not been evaluated in a controlled trial. CT inhibits gastric secretion also after oral application. In an endoscopically controlled double blind trial we were not able to demonstrate a significant benefit of oral CT in patients with
gastric ulcer
. In ulcer bleeding CT does not apear reasonable in comparison with histamine-H2-receptor antagonists which apparently is more efficient and less costly.
...
PMID:[Theoretical and practical implications of calcitonin therapy in gastroduodenal ulcer]. 699 53
Historically, the interplay between basic research and clinical observation has been essential in the development of new therapies for peptic ulcer disease. That histamine is an important regulator of acid secretion emerged from basic research, followed by the clinical development and use of the H2-receptor antagonists. Basic research contributed again by defining the importance of H+/K(+)-ATPase in acid secretion, resulting in a new class of useful antisecretory agents. Basic studies also gave us prostaglandins (PG) as mucosal protective agents. As 'replacement' therapy, clinicians have found that PG are protective against non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID)-induced
gastric ulcer
(GU). Physiologic studies established that somatostatin is a potent inhibitor of acid secretion, providing the stimulus for clinical studies in Zollinger-Ellison (ZE)
Syndrome
with a synthetic analog (octreotide). Work on isoforms of the parietal cell gastrin receptor has shown differences in the cytoplasmic domain for G protein coupling. This will aid in understanding how receptor changes and coupling to second messengers relate to the aetiopathogenesis of abnormal gastric secretion. Immune cells express mRNA for histamine, muscarinic and gastrin receptors, supporting the relevance of mucosal immunology in gastroenterology, especially in light of Helicobacter pylori-associated gastritis and ulcers. Lab research has revealed a potential role for basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF), and another endogenous peptide BPC-15, in ulcer healing. The former substance may be responsible for the antiulcer efficacy of sucralfate. Intensive basic work on how H. pylori organisms attach to gastric cells and initiate inflammatory reactions in the mucosa will have unquestionable impact on improved therapy for peptic ulcer disease.
...
PMID:Clinical relevance of basic research in peptic ulcer disease. 788 Oct 29
The objective of this study was to evaluate the effect of a commercial feed supplement containing pectin-lecithin on squamous mucosa ulceration in horses exposed to an experimental ulceration model. Five mares were treated while five mares were controls for this crossover, blinded study. The mares were fed concentrates and hay and were stabled with a two-hour turn out per day for a period of four weeks. The pectin-lecithin complex was fed for the duration of the study on the treated group. At the end of a four-week period, all mares underwent a seven-day alternating feed deprivation (week 5). The study was repeated again after a four-week washout period. Gastroscopy was performed on days 1, 28 and 35 of the study and was digitally recorded. Independent evaluation of the recordings and scoring of the lesions using the Equine
Gastric Ulcer
Syndrome
(EGUS), severity and number scores were performed by three experienced gastroscopists. The prevalence and severity of squamous ulcers significantly increased after intermittent feed deprivation (P<0.001). No significant effect of the treatment was observed (P>0.05). In this study, the addition of a commercially available pectin-lecithin complex to the feed of horses for five weeks did not prevent or minimise the risk for gastric ulceration of the squamous mucosa.
...
PMID:Efficacy of a pectin-lecithin complex for treatment and prevention of gastric ulcers in horses. 2482 56