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)

To determine the prevalence and significance of Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) infection, biopsies of the antral mucosa were obtained from 139 patients and 43 asymptomatic volunteers. The specimens were examined by hematoxylin-eosin staining and the ureas test. The detection rate of H. pylori by histologic examination was 91.3% in patients with duodenal ulcer, 75.0% in those with combined duodenal and gastric ulcer, 63.6% in those with gastric ulcer, 22.9% in those with gastric carcinoma, 36.4% in those with gastric adenoma, 14.3% in those with gastric hyperplastic polyp, and 51.7% in those with gastritis, and the respective percentages detected by the urease test were 91.3%, 75.0%, 54.5%, 28.6%, 27.3%, 14.3%, and 44.8%. H. pylori was also detected in 10/43 (23.3%) asymptomatic healthy volunteers by histology and the urease test. The prevalence of H. pylori was significantly higher in the patients than in the asymptomatic healthy volunteers (p < 0.05). H. pylori was detected in 62.9% of patients with endoscopic erosive gastritis and in 97.9% of those with histologically proven chronic active gastritis. The urease test was positive in 77/82 patients who were histologically positive for the organism (sensitivity: 93.9%), and it was negative in 98/100 patients who were negative by histology (specificity: 98.0%). Thus, there was over 90% agreement between the urease test and histology. Our investigations showed that H. pylori was closely related to peptic ulcers and antral gastritis, and that the urease test provides a simple, rapid and accurate diagnosis of H. pylori infection.
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PMID:Helicobacter pylori infection and gastroduodenal disease: a comparison of endoscopic findings, histology, and urease test data. 129 70

The variation in the healing and the relapse rates of peptic ulcer disease has led to the search for other factors in the pathogensis of peptic ulcer disease. Helicobacter pylori is believed to be responsible for these different patterns of healing. The results of a study to detect Helicobacter pylori in Sri Lankan patients having duodenal ulcer, gastric ulcer, gastritis and non-ulcer dyspepsia are presented in this paper. The method employed was the urease test which detects the urease enzyme of H. pylori in gastric mucosal biopsies taken during upper gastrointestinal endoscopy. There is a high incidence in those with gastritis and duodenitis.
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PMID:Helicobacter pylori and peptic ulcer disease in Sri Lanka. 158 90

Helicobacter pylori has been implicated in the genesis of human gastritis, dyspepsia, and peptic ulcers. However, its influence in the quality of experimental gastric ulcer healing has not been previously investigated. Standardized gastric fundic ulcers were produced in 50 male Sprague-Dawley rats (150-200 g) by a 4 mm in diameter focal, serosal application of 100% acetic acid. Thirty rats were administered 2 ml H. pylori suspension (urease producing, ATCC 43504) in normal saline (10(8) CFU/ml) 2x/day for 7 days. Twenty rats (controls) received 2 ml normal saline 2x/day for 7 days. Gastric ulcer surface area was measured under a dissecting microscope and mucosal specimens were obtained for qualitative and quantitative histology. No gross or microscopic duodenal abnormalities were identified at sacrifice. Ninety percent of control rats showed grossly and microscopically entirely healed ulcers. The remaining 10% showed partially reepithelialized ulcers (area, 0.78 to 1.77 mm2; mean, 1.27 +/- 0.7 mm2). The grossly "healed" mucosa demonstrated marked dilatation of gastric glands lined with mature surface epithelial cells. Parietal cells were scanty (5-10% of all cells). One hundred percent of the H. pylori-exposed rats showed persistence of chronic active ulcers (area, 1.76 to 19.63 mm2; mean, 8.95 +/- 6.15 mm2). The ulcer beds were infiltrated by acute and chronic inflammatory cells, abundant fibroblasts, and capillary networks. The raised ulcer borders were characterized by dilated glands lined by mature surface epithelial cells. Various special stains demonstrated the presence of H. pylori in the surface mucus and within the crypts.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Helicobacter pylori affects the quality of experimental gastric ulcer healing in a new animal model. 174 15

Helicobacter pylori is a microaerophilic, Gram-negative, spiral rod, the role of which in different gastric diseases has been investigated worldwide since the beginning of the 1980s. H. pylori has been shown to be the causative agent in active chronic gastritis, and it is regularly found in patients endoscopied for duodenal ulcer. The bacterium is also frequently isolated from persons with gastric ulcer, gastric carcinoma and non-ulcer dyspepsia. Apart from cultivation of the bacterium, other diagnostic procedures include various staining methods and urease tests of gastric biopsy samples. The application of non-invasive diagnostic methods, serology and urea breath tests, is rapidly increasing. H. pylori is susceptible to several antimicrobials in vitro, but eradication of the bacterium from the gastric mucosa is not always achieved. The best results until now have been obtained with the combined use of bismuth salts and two antibiotics. In active chronic gastritis and duodenal ulcer patients, eradication of the bacteria has resulted in healing of the disease with permanent decrease of circulating antibodies and negative urease tests. H. pylori has been found worldwide and the infection shows an age-dependent increase. Man, apparently, is the reservoir of the bacterium, but the exact mechanisms of interhuman transmission are still not defined.
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PMID:Helicobacter pylori and associated gastroduodenal diseases. Review article. 185 43

Ammonia, released in the gastric mucosa by the action of Helicobacter pylori urease on transuded plasma urea, curtails the biosynthesis of mucus and/or causes the mucus to be disassembled at the mucosal surface. These changes facilitate colonisation by H pylori and may promote gastric ulcer formation.
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PMID:Hypothesis: Helicobacter pylori, urease, mucus, and gastric ulcer. 196 87

An immunofluorescence assay (IFA) for the detection of immunoglobulin G antibodies directed against Helicobacter pylori was evaluated by comparing 20 serum specimens from patients with a positive urease test on biopsy material and 20 serum specimens from patients with a negative test and with defined clinical symptoms. The resulting anti-H. pylori titers were classified as follows: negative, less than or equal to 64; borderline, 128; and positive, greater than or equal to 256. By using these criteria, the IFA was subsequently tested, using 100 serum specimens from patients with gastric complaints. Overall, the titers were 71% positive, 10% borderline, and 19% negative. Depending on the patients' biopsy urease test results, the sensitivity and specificity of the assay were calculated to be 96%. Furthermore, these sera were classified into three subgroups on the basis of clinical manifestations: gastritis with 74% positive and 10% borderline titers, duodenal ulcer with 84% positive and 4% borderline titers, and gastric ulcer with 52% positive and 16% borderline titers. A serologic follow-up study was carried out with three patients with gastric ulcers who had been treated with colloidal bismuth subcitrate for 4 weeks and erythromycin for the final 2 weeks. The results indicate that a significant decrease in titer could be expected within 9 to 12 months after successful therapy, as determined by repeated negative CLO tests. Absorption experiments demonstrated that possible cross-reactivity between H. pylori and C. jejuni did not influence serodiagnosis.
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PMID:Evaluation of an immunofluorescence assay for specific detection of immunoglobulin G antibodies directed against Helicobacter pylori, and antigenic cross-reactivity between H. pylori and Campylobacter jejuni. 200 40

Little is known about the source and spread of Helicobacter pylori, but transmission from infected family contacts has been suggested. We have therefore investigated 15 children with peptic ulcer and their first-degree relatives for H. pylori. Serum anti-H. pylori IgG, pepsinogen I, and gastrin levels were measured. Endoscopy was carried out on the children and relatives, and biopsies were taken from the gastric antrum for histology, microbiology, and urease testing. Six of 11 children with duodenal ulcer (55%) and two of four children with gastric ulcer (50%) were positive for H. pylori. Fourteen of 16 parents (87%) and eight of 13 siblings (61%) of H. pylori-positive children with peptic ulcer were also infected compared with eight of 14 parents (57%) and none of four siblings of H. pylori-negative children with peptic ulcer (P less than 0.10, greater than 0.05, and NS, respectively). The children with H. pylori-negative peptic ulcer and negative siblings combined were younger than positive children with peptic ulcer and positive siblings (P less than 0.001). The reliability of serum anti-H. pylori IgG level as a screening test for infection was confirmed. These findings call into question a pathogenetic role for H. pylori in some childhood peptic ulceration, but do suggest that person-to-person spread of infection occurs.
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PMID:Helicobacter pylori in children with peptic ulcer and their families. 202 57

Helicobacter (Campylobacter) pylori has been cultured from the antral biopsies of 85-90% of patients of gastritis, gastric ulcer and duodenal ulcer at different centres. Studies conducted all over the world have firmly implicated this organism in the aetiology of active superficial gastritis and recurrences of duodenal ulcer. Two hundred patients with upper abdominal pain, distension, vomiting and/or haemetemesis were subjected to OGD scopy. In 163 of these patients there was endoscopic evidence of gastritis; in 24 there was DU; in 3, GU and in 10 it was normal. Diagnosis of H pylori infection was made by the rapid biopsy urease test which is nearly 100% specific and 98% sensitive. 170 out of 200 patients were positive for H pylori. Among these were 138 patients of gastritis (84.6%); 22 cases of DU (91.6%); 2 cases of GU (66.6%) and 8 in whom endoscopy was normal. Histological examination of the antral biopsy specimens showed mild to severe infiltration of mucosa with lymphocytes and plasma cells. None of the 170 H pylori positive cases showed polymorphonuclear infiltration which has been stressed repeatedly by most Western authors to be characteristic of "active" superficial gastritis associated with H pylori infection. Even in those with a history of dyspepsia of barely 4 weeks duration or less there was no PMN infiltration in the mucosa. Thus the local response to infection by H pylori of the gastric mucosa is different in Indian patients.
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PMID:Unusual features of Helicobacter (Campylobacter) pylori--associated gastritis in India. A study of 200 cases. 209 22

Helicobacter pylori (H.p.), has been shown, experimentally, to exert a proteolytic activity against mucous fractions. Aim of this study was to assess the prevalence of H.p. in peptic ulcer and to analyze its possible influence on gastric mucus components, on peptic activity in gastric juice and the possible action on peptic secretion. 223 patients undergoing upper gastrointestinal endoscopy were analyzed for the presence of H.p. in the mucosa: 99 duodenal ulcer patients (D.U.), 58 gastric ulcer patients (D.U.) and 66 dyspeptic subjects. In each patients, three contiguous gastric biopsies were taken at the antrum: the first was evaluated for gastritis (Whitehead Criteria), the two other analyzed for H.p. with a rapid urease test. In a subgroup of 25 D.U. and 18 G.U. patients, two other biopsies were taken at the fundus corpus of the stomach, to evaluate peptic secretion. To determinate mucous components (acid and neutral glycoproteins, galactose and N-acetylneuraminic acid), gastric juice samples were collected during endoscopy. H.p. was present in 89% of antral biopsies in D.U., in 56% of G.U. and in 51% of D., and was associated to antral gastritis. As regard gastric juice components, we observed an increase and a decrease of acid glycoproteins, respectively, in D.U. and G.U. patients with H.p. infection. An increase of peptic activity has been found in the gastric juice of both gastric and duodenal ulcer patients H.p. positive (G.U. p less than 0.05). On the contrary, no significant differences were observed on peptic activity in the fundus-corpus biopsies between H.p. positive and H.p. negative patients.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Does Helicobacter pylori have a direct proteolytic effect in ulcerative disease?]. 219 77

We examined the morphological changes in gastric mucosa and the generation of ammonia after exposure of the rat stomach to urea in the presence of urease, in attempts to investigate a pathophysiological role of urea, urease, and ammonia system in gastric ulcer diseases. Exposure of the stomach for 20 min to 2 ml urea (0.025-0.2%) together with urease (100 IU) induced histological damages in a concentration-related manner. Either urea or urease alone did not induce any histological change in the mucosa. Instillation of urea into the stomach generated ammonia in the presence of urease; the amount of ammonia was increased depending on the concentration of urea, and was closely associated with the severity of histological damage. The exposure of the stomach to ammonia (NH4OH: 0.01-0.1%) also produced histological damages in the gastric mucosa in a concentration-related manner. The characteristics of injury induced by 0.5-1.0% ammonia were stasis of microcirculation, disruption of the surface epithelial cells, and necrosis of the mucosa. These results demonstrated that ammonia generated from the hydrolysis of urea by urease in the stomach causes damages in the gastric mucosa.
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PMID:Generation of ammonia and mucosal lesion formation following hydrolysis of urea by urease in the rat stomach. 221 35


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