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)

We have observed an adenocarcinoma of the stomach which developed on the site where an apparently benign active gastric ulcer had been diagnosed radiologically 10 and 7 years previously. The patient had complained of recurrent episodes of epigastric pain over ten years, which were well controlled by the medical treatment. The length of clinical history in this patient makes it unlikely that his ulcer was neoplastic at the time of onset. This appears to be, therefore, one of the rare instances of development of a gastric carcinoma on the site of a previously benign peptic ulcer.
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PMID:[Development of gastric carcinoma at the site of a preceding peptic ulcer after 10 years]. 233 69

N-Methyl-N-nitro-N'-nitrosoguanidine (MNNG) is a gastric carcinogen in several animal species and has been used in a number of systems to dissect the co-carcinogenic potential of various compounds in the induction of gastric adenocarcinoma. Recent epidemiological evidence suggests that Helicobacter pylori may play a role as a co-carcinogen in the etiology of this tumor in humans and we have been interested in developing an animal model to study this possibility. A related organism, H. mustelae, naturally colonizes the ferret stomach and causes persistent chronic gastritis. The pathology elicited by H. mustelae in ferrets has many similarities with the human disease including different stages of multifocal atrophic gastritis which underlie the gastric ulcer and gastric carcinoma syndrome. There is little evidence, however, demonstrating the susceptibility of ferrets toward chemical carcinogenesis. We have consequently undertaken a study to ascertain whether 10 6-month-old female ferrets given a single oral dose of MNNG (50-100 mg/kg) would develop adenocarcinoma of the stomach. Five age-matched unmanipulated control animals were included for comparative purposes. All 15 ferrets were infected with H. mustelae. Nine of 10 ferrets dosed with MNNG developed gastric adenocarcinoma (29-55 months after dosing), while none of the five historical control ferrets examined an average of 63 months after the initiation of the study developed gastric tumors. By comparison, we have not observed gastric adenocarcinoma, nor has it been reported, in > 10 years of observation of untreated ferrets naturally infected with H. mustelae. The H. mustelae-infected ferret, with demonstrated susceptibility to a gastric carcinogen, plus the recent availability of specific pathogen-free ferrets, should now allow longitudinal studies in vivo to probe the role of Helicobacter in the development of gastric cancer.
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PMID:MNNG-induced gastric carcinoma in ferrets infected with Helicobacter mustelae. 840 24

Gastric adenocarcinoma can be divided into two histopathological types: intestinal and diffuse. In addition to the role of environmental factors, an association between gastric cancer and Helicobacter pylori has been suggested. A retrospective study was therefore carried out among 46 patients who had gastric cancer. As a control group, 40 patients with non-malignant disorders were selected (11 patients with peptic ulcer, 12 with chronic superficial gastritis, 17 with chronic atrophic gastritis). Twenty-six cancers were classified as intestinal type and 20 as diffuse type. H. pylori was found in 23 (88 per cent) of the intestinal type and 11 (55 per cent) of the diffuse type (P < 0.05). Patients with the intestinal-type gastric cancer had a higher prevalence of H. pylori infection than those with gastric ulcer (55 per cent) and chronic superficial gastritis (50 per cent) (P < 0.05). These findings suggest that there is a possible association between the intestinal type of gastric cancer and H. pylori infection.
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PMID:Gastric cancer and Helicobacter pylori infection. 840 77

The possibility of using [18F] FDG PET for assessment of tumor extension in primary gastric non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL) was studied in 8 patients (6 high-grade and 2 low-grade, one of the MALT type) and in a control group of 7 patients (5 patients with NHL without clinical signs of gastric involvement, 1 patient with NHL and benign gastric ulcer and 1 patient with adenocarcinoma of the stomach). All patients with gastric NHL and the two with benign gastric ulcer and adenocarcinoma, respectively, underwent endoscopy including multiple biopsies for histopathological diagnosis. All patients with high-grade and one of the two with low-grade NHL and the patient with adenocarcinoma displayed high gastric uptake of [18F] FDG corresponding to the pathological findings at endoscopy and/or CT. No pathological tracer uptake was seen in the patient with low-grade gastric NHL of the MALT type. In 6/8 patients with gastric NHL, [18F] FDG PET demonstrated larger tumor extension in the stomach than was found at endoscopy, and there was high tracer uptake in the stomach in two patients who were evaluated as normal on CT. [18F] FDG PET correctly excluded gastric NHL in the patient with a benign gastric ulcer and in the patients with NHL without clinical signs of gastric involvement. Although the experience is as yet limited, [18F] FDG PET affords a novel possibility for evaluation of gastric NHL and would seem valuable as a complement to endoscopy and CT in selected patients, where the technique can yield additional information decisive for the choice of therapy.
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PMID:[18F] FDG PET in gastric non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. 940 47

A 42-year-old man was transferred to the Emergency Department after his friends had found him unresponsive and confused in his room. He had been experiencing upper abdominal complaints for a period of several months. He had taken large amounts of a calcium carbonate/magnesium subcarbonate preparation (Rennie) and had consumed at least 3 litres of dairy products per day. His behaviour was reported as being more and more abnormal during the previous few weeks. On admission he was confused and agitated and had involuntary movements of his limbs. Laboratory investigation indicated a triple acid base disorder, i.e. metabolic alkalosis, respiratory alkalosis and high anion gap metabolic acidosis, with severe dehydration. The metabolic alkalosis was caused by the intake of large amounts of dairy and antacids: milk-alkali syndrome. The metabolic acidosis was the result of hypovolaemia and pre-renal renal failure and the respiratory alkalosis was caused by hyperventilation due to the organic psychosyndrome. The patient was treated with volume expansion by isotonic saline and the administration of potassium and he was sedated with low-dose midazolam, which led to a full respiratory compensation of the metabolic alkalosis. A few days following admission, both the plasma calcium concentration and renal function returned to normal; the acid-base disorder completely normalized and the organic psychosyndrome disappeared. On gastroduodenoscopy a gastric ulcer was found; biopsies revealed a signet ring cell adenocarcinoma of the stomach.
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PMID:[A man with a classic serious milk-alkali syndrome and a carcinoma of the stomach]. 1690 Oct 67

Krukenberg tumors accompanied by gestational hypertension are rare and have a poor patient prognosis. A gravida 1, para 0 patient was submitted to Tianjin Medical University General Hospital (Tianjin, China) at 32 weeks gestation with symptoms of nausea, vomiting and hypertension. Diagnosis from the gastroscopic biopsy was of a gastric ulcer. A unilateral ovarian mass was identified with B-scan ultrasonography and magnetic resonance imaging, but was confirmed pathologically as a bilateral Krukenberg tumor. Positron emission tomography-computed tomography revealed a high radioactive uptake in the lesser curvature wall of the stomach, and postoperative pathology revealed poorly differentiated adenocarcinoma of the stomach. As Krukenberg tumors are difficult to diagnose, exhibit fast progression and have a poor clinical outcome, developing a greater understanding of Krukenberg tumors is crucial. Imaging manifestations combined with serological examination may aid in early detection, which may lead to improved patient management.
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PMID:Krukenberg tumor in a pregnant patient with severe preeclampsia. 2492 29