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Query: UMLS:C0038358 (gastric ulcer)
5,179 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Gastric ulceration produced by aspirin and indomethacin was compared in acutely stressed and non-stressed rats. We found a synergism between these anti-inflammatory agents and acute stress in the production of gastric ulcers. Even at relatively high doses, neither agent caused appreciable gastric damage in non-stressed rats, whereas moderate doses of both agents produced massive ulceration in stressed rats. The synergism appears unrelated to the effect of these agents on the pituitary-adrenal response. The size and regional distribution of ulcers produced by aspirin and indomethacin in stressed rats were comparable. However, the dose--response curves of the two drugs were markedly dissimilar. Furthermore, the ulceration produced by indomethacin was attenuated by both H1 and H2 histamine receptor antagonists, whereas ulceration produced by aspirin was attenuated only by an H2 antagonist. The results suggest that the ulcerogenic mechanism of indomethacin may differ from that of aspirin and add to the growing evidence on the importance of endogenous histamine in various forms of gastric ulceration.
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PMID:Aspirin- and indomethacin-induced ulcers and their antagonism by antihistamines. 71 May 3

We evaluated the role of oxygen free radicals in the induction of acute stress gastric ulcer in rats. After 12 hr of immobility, ulcers of up to 4 mm were observed in the gastric mucosa. Pretreatment with allopurinol, a xanthine oxidase inhibitor, produced a significant reduction in the number and size of lesions (p < 0.0001). No protection was afforded by aluminum hydroxide or ranitidine alone, but enhanced protection was observed when given in association to allopurinol. A secondary role for H ions is suggested by these findings. Our results support the hypothesis of a role of oxygen free radicals in the pathogenesis of stress gastric ulcers. Allopurinol might be used in conditions predisposing to stress in patients.
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PMID:[The etiopathogenesis of the acute stress ulcer. The role of oxygen free radicals]. 215 40

Acute massive gastroduodenal ulcer haemorrhage may be caused by peptic ulcers or acute stress ulcerations. The former is a clinical problem that is met with fairly frequently, associated with a mortality of 10-20%. Bleeding stress ulcerations are less common but have a still more serious prognosis. The histamine H2-receptor antagonist cimetidine has in one large study been demonstrated to reduce mortality in ulcer haemorrhage, and in other studies beneficial effects have been found in elderly patients; above all in elderly gastric ulcer patients. Other authors again find no beneficial effects. The inconsistent results can be due to the fact that other factors, such as high age, profuse bleeding, and concomitant disabling diseases, are more important for the outcome than inhibiting acid secretion with H2-receptor antagonists. In stress ulcers, H2-receptor antagonists have been shown to be effective as part in the prophylactic treatment. Antacids might be more effective, but high doses are often required.
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PMID:Role of histamine H2 receptor antagonists in nonoperative management of gastroduodenal ulcer haemorrhage. 289 62

The effect of two different types of acute stress (immobilization and fasting) on the polymorphonuclear leukocyte phagocytic function has been studied in male and female rats. With this aim, a subgroup of rats was under immobilization and fasting, another under complete energy deprivation and a third one (controls), exposed to the normal activity of the animal room, for 15 hours. The stress induction was assessed by controlling weight variations and gastric ulcers generation. Both stressors induced weight loss but only immobilization resulted in the development of gastric ulcer in all the animals studied. Phagocytosis was increased in male rats stressed by fasting and in immobilized female rats. In the remaining subgroups polymorphonuclear leukocyte cells showed a phagocytic capacity within the range of control values. Only comparison of the males group stressed by fasting with the male group stressed by fasting and immobilization showed a significant depression in phagocytosis.
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PMID:Effects of fasting and immobilization stresses on the phagocytic capacity of rat polymorphonuclear phagocyte monolayers. 359 41

Development of acute mucosal ulceration is a complex series of catabolic interactions. Hospitalized patients with duodenal or gastric ulcer, pathologic gastric hypersecretory states (such as Zollinger-Ellison syndrome), gastric outlet obstruction, esophagitis, severe gastritis or duodenitis, sepsis, trauma (particularly head injury or burns), and some patients receiving high-dose corticosteroids are at risk of developing acute stress ulcers. Treatment should be initiated as soon as the patient is identified as being at risk, because measures designed to prevent bleeding or perforation are more effective than those designed to stop bleeding once it supervenes and the cascade of multiple organ failure commences. The presence of acid will trigger the onset of this condition; however, ulceration will not occur if the intraluminal pH can be maintained above 5 by periodic antacid treatment or by H2-receptor blockade. The dosing regimen of antacid or of H2-receptor antagonist should not be fixed, but should be sufficient to keep the gastric pH higher than 5. Antagonists administered via a nasogastric tube are the first line of defense, but 30 to 50 percent of the most ill patients will also be treated parenterally with H2-receptor antagonists. Parenteral H2-receptor blockade therapy is indicated in these patients when the risk of acute or continued ulceration of esophageal, gastric, or duodenal mucosa is high and the oral administration of medication is either not possible or the response to such therapy is unreliable. Parenteral H2-receptor antagonists are rarely administered alone.
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PMID:Indications for the use of parenteral H2-receptor antagonists. 615 Jun 38

The intragastric concentrations of lysolecithin and bile acids were determined in 44 chronic peptic ulcer patients and 35 healthy volunteers. Normal reflux values were found in the prepyloric ulcer (Johnson type III) (n = 15) Elevated reflux amounts could be observed in the type I gastric ulcer (n = 15), there was a three-to fourfold increase compared to the controls. - Slightly elevated reflux concentrations were found in the duodenal ulcer patients (n = 14), but only under fasting conditions. The increase of reflux concentration in chronic gastric ulcer type I is shown to be in the same range as in acute stress ulcer. Compared to the three-to four times higher reflux concentrations of the resected stomach, the duodenogastric reflux in ulcer disease is very moderate. It's role in ulcerogenesis has to be analyzed further.
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PMID:[Ulcer disease and duodenogastric reflux]. 684 81

For a period of 10 years (1980-1990) a total of 2034 emergency, early and postponed endoscopies have been performed in patients with upper digestive tract bleeding at the Department of Emergency Surgery in Sofia. Duodenal ulcer has been the leading cause of bleeding--41.19 per cent of the cases, with gastric ulcer ranking second--14.94 per cent. There followed in descending rank order: gastric and duodenal erosions--12.34 per cent; gastric cancer--5.06 per cent; hemorrhagic gastritis--2.56 per cent; esophageal varices--7.27 per cent; Mallory-Weiss syndrome--1.62 per cent. Bleeding from the digestive tract of patients with CNS trauma based on acute stress ulcer and erosions and activated old callous ulcer occupied the 12th place in rank order. On the 13th place ranked upper digestive tract bleeding in patients who had undergone thermic trauma (2.01 per cent). Much fewer wer the cases of bleeding secondary to peptic ulcer of the jejunum, gastric and duodenal diverticulosis, acute ulcers in patients with cardiovascular diseases, blood diseases, liver, bile duct and pancreas diseases, aorto-duodenal fistulas and drug-induced diseases. The cause remained unknown in 1.77 per cent of the patients. On the basis of the indisputable achievements in [correction of ti] the diagnosis of acute upper digestive tract hemorrhage, the approach to these grave nosologic entities has essentially been altered.
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PMID:[The results and a discussion of the esophagogastroduodenoscopic studies performed successfully, early and postponed in patients with upper digestive tract hemorrhages in 1980-1990]. 841 75

The concept that stress and personality are associated with ulcer is widely held by lay persons and to some extent by the medical community. By means of epidemiological techniques and more precise terminology, the role of psychosomatic factors in ulcer disease has been more clearly defined. Regarding acute stress, the number of events experienced and the change and distress they are purported to produce has been found to be similar in ulcer patients and their controls matched on age, sex, and social class. However, chronic difficulties, i.e., events or circumstances that have persisted for > or = 6 months, are twice as common in duodenal ulcer patients as in controls. Events, either acute or chronic, are more strongly associated with duodenal ulcer if they contain a component involving personal threat or goal frustration. Associations that have been found between acute or chronic stress and duodenal ulcer have been relatively weak, with odds ratios of 2 to 3. For some patients, it is possible that depression and social incongruity may have played some role in initiating ulcer disease. Personality studies have shown that ulcer patients are more neurotic than controls, but the difference is small and there is no evidence to indicate an ulcer personality. As regards both stress and personality, gastric ulcer patients do not differ from duodenal ulcer patients.
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PMID:Stress and personality in patients with chronic peptic ulcer. 828 Feb 51

The effect of various stressors of different intensity applied in random order before the final single immersion restraint stress was tested in two inbred rat strains, isoprenaline-sensitive and isoprenaline-resistant. The isoprenaline-sensitive strain revealed higher incidence of heart lesions after this single acute stress and low incidence of gastric lesions. The isoprenaline-resistant strain had the opposite characteristics. These differences were constantly reproducible when this strong stressor was used. After prestress by different stressors (tail-flick, ether anaesthesia, Porsolt swimming stress) at different time schedules, the incidence of gastric ulcer lesions, the weight of organs (heart, adrenals, spleen) changed substantially in isoprenaline-sensitive rats only. The most important result was reversal of the extent of gastric lesions. The isoprenaline-sensitive strain revealed more lesions than the isoprenaline-resistant one. The repeated different prestressors mainly changed the reactivity of animals, isoprenaline-sensitive rats becoming more similar to isoprenaline-resistant rats. These findings urged us to interpret carefully the results obtained in stress research with different and multiple stressors both in animals and humans.
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PMID:The influence of repeated prestressors on single stress response in rats. 1072 Jan 1

Siotone (ST) is a herbal formulation comprising of Withania somnifera, Ocimum sanctum, Asparagus racemosus, Tribulus terristris and shilajit, all of which are classified in Ayurveda as rasayanas which are reputed to promote physical and mental health, improve defence mechanisms of the body and enhance longevity. These attributes are similar to the modern concept of adaptogenic agents, which are, known to afford protection of the human physiological system against diverse stressors. The present study was undertaken to investigate the adaptogenic activity of ST against chronic unpredictable, but mild, footshock stress induced perturbations in behaviour (depression), glucose metabolism, suppressed male sexual behaviour, immunosuppression and cognitive dysfunction in CF strain albino rats. Gastric ulceration, adrenal gland and spleen weights, ascorbic acid and corticosterone concentrations of adrenal cortex, and plasma corticosterone levels, were used as the stress indices. Panax ginseng (PG) was used as the standard adaptogenic agent for comparison. Additionally, rat brain levels of tribulin, an endogenous endocoid postulated to be involved in stress, were also assessed in terms of endogenous monoamine oxidase (MAO) A and MAOB inhibitory activity. Chronic unpredictable footshock induced marked gastric ulceration, significant increase in adrenal gland weight and plasma corticosterone levels, with concomitant decreases in spleen weight, and concentrations of adrenal gland ascorbic acid and corticosterone. These effects were attenuated by ST (50 and 100 mg/kg, p.o.) and PG (100 mg/kg, p.o.), administered once daily over a period of 14 days, the period of stress induction. Chronic stress also induced glucose intolerance, suppressed male sexual behaviour, induced behavioural depression (Porsolt's swim despair test and learned helplessness test) and cognitive dysfunction (attenuated retention of learning in active and passive avoidance tests), and immunosuppression (leucocyte migration inhibition and sheep RBC challenged increase in paw oedema in sensitized rats). All these chronic stress-induced perturbations were attenuated, dose-dependently by ST (50 and 100 mg/kg, p.o.) and PG (100 mg/kg, p.o.). Chronic stress-induced increase in rat brain tribulin activity was also reversed by these doses of ST and by PG. The results indicate that ST has significant adaptogenic activity, qualitatively comparable to PG, against a variety of behavioural, biochemical and physiological perturbations induced by unpredictable stress, which has been proposed to be a better indicator of clinical stress than acute stress parameters. The likely contribution of the individual constituents of ST in the observed adaptogenic action of the polyherbal formulation, have been discussed.
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PMID:Adaptogenic activity of Siotone, a polyherbal formulation of Ayurvedic rasayanas. 1121 27


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