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Query: UMLS:C0038358 (
gastric ulcer
)
5,179
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Biopsy specimens of human gastric mucosa of patients with gastric complaints and subjected to endoscopic examination were cultured microaerobically, and Campylobacter pyloridis was detected in 46 out of 80 cases (57.5%). The organism was found in 13 out of 22 patients with gastritis, 11 out of 16 with
gastric ulcer
scar, 7 out of 16 with
gastric ulcer
, 3 out of 9 with gastric polyp, 4 out of 5 with gastric carcinoma, 2 out of 2 with esophagus carcinoma, and 6 out of 9 with other gastric diseases. The isolates were identified as C. pyloridis, demonstrating its characteristic features such as positive for oxidase and catalase, negative for reduction of nitrite and
nitrate
, positive for urease, no growth at 25 C, growth at 37 C, not tolerant to 1% glycine, and resistant to nalidixic acid. Positive alkaline phosphatase activity was considered as an additional feature characteristic for the strains of C. pyloridis. The major cellular fatty acids were tetradecanoic acid and 19-carbon-cyclopropane acid. This pattern is unique among Campylobacter species. The survival of the organism for a longer period than 60 min at pH 2.5 indicates its significant resistance to acidic environment.
...
PMID:Isolation of Campylobacter pyloridis from human gastric mucosa and characterization of the isolates. 343 27
Of the N-nitroso compounds derived from precursors in gastric juice, only a very small proportion are in the form of volatile N-nitrosamines. However, about 40% of the remainder can be converted by methylation into a form(s) suitable for gas chromatography. In this way, at least 20 individual peaks were detected with the Thermal Energy Analyzer as detector. N-Nitroso compounds have been determined as a group in the fasting gastric juice of normal individuals and patients with conditions including duodenal ulcer,
gastric ulcer
, atrophic gastritis, pernicious anaemia, gastric carcinoma, dyspepsia with normal endoscopy or subjected to operative procedures, such as vagotomy or partial gastrectomy. Both the levels of N-nitroso compounds and pH values increased significantly with age in normal subjects and in those with pathological conditions. Sex and cigarette smoking had no significant influence. In particular, a positive correlation was found between pH and the level of N-nitroso compounds, with a p value of less than or equal to 10(-6). Their concentration rose from a geometric mean of 0.11 mumol.1(-1) at pH 1.0-1.5, to a value of 1.3 mumol.1(-1) within the pH range 6.5-9.0. Whilst quantitative bacteriology was not carried out, a highly significant relationship was also observed between the concentration of N-nitroso compounds and the availability of
nitrate
-reducing bacteria. Thus, conditions conducive to gastric cancer are associated with higher levels of compounds responding to group analysis as N-nitrosamines and/or N-nitrosamides.
...
PMID:N-nitroso compounds in gastric juice and their relationship to gastroduodenal disease. 714 42
A six week course of cimetidine (1 g/day) healed peptic ulcers in 20 of 23 patients (14 with duodenal ulcer, nine with
gastric ulcer
). Reduction of basal acid output by 73% and peak acid output by 36% led to a rise in concentrations of intragastric aerobic bacteria and
nitrate
-reducing bacteria. While the mean intragastric concentration of
nitrate
was unchanged by treatment, there were statistically significant rises in nitrite and N-nitrosamine concentrations. The conversion from nitrates to nitrites was closely related to the occurrence of
nitrate
-reducing bacteria. In three patients the intragastric milieu had returned to normal two months after cimetidine treatment had been discontinued. Mean nitrite and N-nitrosamine concentrations did not return to pre-treatment levels in the group of eight patients who remained on maintenance cimetidine (0.4 g at night-time) for three months after the full dose treatment. This study shows that cimetidine treatment can create an intragastric milieu resembling that of atrophic gastritis. Large scale and long-term studies are necessary to establish whether these findings have any clinical significance.
...
PMID:Intragastric nitrites, nitrosamines, and bacterial overgrowth during cimetidine treatment. 717 16
1. The influence of hyperammonemia (produced by the continuous intraperitoneal infusion of ammonium acetate for 6 days) on stress-induced
gastric ulcer
formation was investigated in conscious rats. 2. Continuous ammonium acetate infusion significantly reduced stress-induced gastric ulceration concomitant with an increase in gastric blood flow, as determined using radioactive microspheres. The serum levels of L-arginine as well as nitrite and
nitrate
(oxidative byproducts of nitric oxide) were increased by ammonium acetate infusion. 3. Prior administration of N omega-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester, a competitive nitric oxide synthase inhibitor, substantially attenuated the increase in gastric blood flow caused by ammonium acetate infusion and diminished the protective effect on gastric ulceration. 4. These findings suggest that the synthesis of endogenous nitric oxide from L-arginine is accelerated by continuous ammonium acetate infusion when the urea cycle remains intact and has a substantial cytoprotective effect on the stomach, probably through maintaining the gastric mucosal microcirculation.
...
PMID:Hyperammonemia reduces water immersion--restraint stress gastric ulcers in rats. 959 85
Fasting breath nitrous oxide (N2O) concentration was determined in relation to pH,
nitrate
(
NO3
-) and nitrite (NO2-) concentrations in gastric juice, and Helicobacter pylori infection in 86 successive patients. N2O was measured with an infrared-photoacoustic analyzer.
NO3
- and NO2- were measured using the Griess reaction. Fasting breath N2O concentration in controls (87 +/- 21 ppb) was not significantly different from that in patients with
gastric ulcer
or other gastric lesions. Breath N2O was significantly correlated with gastric
NO3
- (P < 0.01) and was higher in patients with elevated gastric NO2- (246 +/- 87 ppb) than in patients without NO2- (75 +/- 13 ppb). Breath N2O did not differ significantly between subjects who were positive or negative for H. pylori. In conclusion, fasting breath N2O concentration is in some manner related to intragastric
NO3
- and NO2- concentrations. The possible use of measuring breath N2O as predictors of cancer needs further research.
...
PMID:Association of fasting breath nitrous oxide concentration with gastric juice nitrate and nitrite concentrations and Helicobacter pylori infection. 1111 83
Melatonin, a major hormone of pineal gland, was recently shown to attenuate acute gastric lesions induced by strong irritants because of the scavenging of free radicals but its role in ulcer healing has been little investigated. In this study we compared the effects of intragastric (i.g.) administration of melatonin and its precursor, L-tryptophan, with or without concurrent treatment with luzindole, a selective antagonist of melatonin MT2 receptors, on healing of chronic gastric ulcers induced by serosal application of acetic acid (ulcer area 28 mm2). The involvement of endogenous prostaglandins (PG), nitric oxide (NO) and sensory nerves in ulcer healing action of melatonin and L-tryptophan was studied in rats treated with indomethacin and NG-nitro-L-arginine (L-NNA) to suppress, respectively, cyclo-oxygenases (COX) and NO synthases or in those with functionally deactivated sensory nerves with capsaicin. The influence of melatonin on gastric secretion during ulcer healing was tested in separate group of rats with
gastric ulcer
equipped with gastric fistulas (GF). At day 8 and 15 upon the ulcer induction, the area of gastric ulcers was measured by planimetry, the mucosal blood flow (GBF) was determined by H2-gas clearance technique and gastric luminal NO2-/
NO3
- levels was assessed by Griess reaction. Plasma melatonin and gastrin levels were measured by specific radioimmunoassay (RIA). Biopsy mucosal samples were taken for expression of constitutive NO-synthase (cNOS) and inducible NOS (iNOS) by reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR). Melatonin (2.5-20 mg/kg-d i.g.) and L-tryptophan (25-100 mg/kg-d i.g.) dose-dependently accelerated ulcer healing, the dose inhibiting by 50% (ED50) of ulcer area being 10 and 115 mg/kg, respectively. This inhibitory effect of melatonin (10 mg/kg-d i.g.) and L-tryptophan (100 mg/kg-d i.g.) on ulcer healing was accompanied by a significant rise in the GBF at ulcer margin and an increase of plasma melatonin. luminal NO2-/
NO3
- and plasma gastrin levels. Gastric acid and pepsin outputs were significantly inhibited during the ulcer healing in melatonin-treated gastric mucosa as compared with those in vehicle-treated animals. Luzindole abolished completely the healing effects of melatonin and L-tryptophan and attenuated significantly the rise in plasma gastrin evoked by the hormone and its precursor. Indomethacin (5 mg/kg-d i.p). that blocked PG biosynthesis by 90% or L-NAME (20 mg/kg i.v), inhibitor of NOS. that suppressed luminal NO release, attenuated significantly melatonin and L-tryptophan-induced acceleration of ulcer healing and accompanying rise in GBF at ulcer margin and luminal NO release. The melatonin-induced acceleration of ulcer healing, hyperemia at ulcer margin and increase in the release of NO were enhanced when L-arginine but not D-arginine was added to L-NAME. The ulcer healing and the GBF effects of melatonin and L-tryptophan were significantly impaired in rats with capsaicin-induced denervation of sensory nerves and both, ulcer healing and the hyperemia at ulcer margin were restored in these rats by addition of exogenous CGRP to melatonin and L-tryptophan. Expression of cNOS mRNA was detected by RT-PCR in the intact gastric mucosa as well as at the edge of gastric ulcers treated with both, vehicle and melatonin, while iNOS mRNA that was undetectable in the intact gastric mucosa, appeared during ulcer healing and especially this was strongly up-regulated in the melatonin-treated gastric mucosa. We conclude that (1) exogenous melatonin and that derived from its precursor, L-tryptophan, accelerate ulcer healing probably via interaction with MT2 receptors; (2) this ulcer healing action is caused by an enhancement by melatonin of the microcirculation at the ulcer margin possibly mediated by COX-derived PG and NO because of overexpression of iNOS and (3) gastrin, which exhibits trophic activity in the gastric mucosa and calcitonin gene related peptide (CGRP), released from sensory nerves, may also contribute to the ulcer healing action of melatonin.
...
PMID:Role of prostaglandins, nitric oxide, sensory nerves and gastrin in acceleration of ulcer healing by melatonin and its precursor, L-tryptophan. 1207 98
Helicobacter pylori is a risk factor for gastric and duodenal ulcers, but gastric ulcers generally occur in individuals who have low acid production and diffuse gastritis, whereas duodenal ulcers are more likely to occur with high acid output and antrum-predominant gastritis. Low acid production, gastritis, and ulcer healing each contribute to poor antioxidant absorption, oxidative stress, and elevated nitrite levels in the stomach. N-Nitrosamines are known carcinogens, and
nitrate
ingestion has been related to bladder cancer risk. Consequently, we hypothesized that the gastric conditions associated with gastric ulcers may contribute to elevated bladder cancer risk. We thus examined the association between self-reported history of peptic ulcer disease and the risk of bladder cancer (414 cases) over 14 years of follow-up in the Health Professional Follow-Up Study. Cox proportional hazards models were performed to adjust for known risk factors of bladder cancer. Men who reported a
gastric ulcer
before 1986 had a significantly higher risk of bladder cancer compared with those with no history of
gastric ulcer
(relative risk = 1.55, 95% confidence interval = 1.03-2.33, controlling for smoking and other potential confounders). No association was observed for duodenal ulcers (multivariate relative risk = 0.97, 95% confidence interval = 0.68-1.38). The ulcers in this study were based solely on self-report and not medical records; consequently, misclassification of ulcers may have occurred. Although intriguing, these findings need to be replicated.
...
PMID:Peptic ulcer disease and the risk of bladder cancer in a prospective study of male health professionals. 1573 88
This case control study presents data on the concentrations of nitrite and
nitrate
and a variety of pro-inflammatory cytokines such as interleukin-1 beta (IL-1 beta), interleukin-2R (IL-2R), interleukin-6 (IL-6), interleukin-8 (IL-8) and tumor necrosis factor TNF-alpha in gastric fluid and serum. Patients with gastritis,
gastric ulcer
and gastric cancer are studied and grouped according to infection by Helicobacter pylori. The 208 patients who underwent upper gastrointestinal endoscopic examination were classified as follows; H. pylori-positive gastritis (n = 32), H. pylori-negative gastritis (n = 32), H. pylori-positive ulcers (n = 34), H. pylori-negative ulcers (n = 34), 43 patients with H. pylori-positive gastric cancer in addition to 33 H. pylori-negative healthy control individuals. Gastric fluids and blood samples were taken concomitantly. Cytokines and nitrite and
nitrate
determinations were attempted as soon as possible after collection of the samples. Nitrite and
nitrate
levels of serum and gastric fluids of H. pylori-positive gastritis and ulcers were higher than H. pylori-negative gastritis and ulcers. The concentrations of total nitrite and
nitrate
and cytokines (TNF-alpha, IL-2R, IL-6, and IL-8) in gastric fluids and sera of H. pylori-positive gastric cancer patients were higher than H. pylori-negative control groups. IL-1 beta level was significantly elevated in gastric fluid of infected cancer patients but not in serum. Taken together, the results suggest that an increase in cytokine-NO combination in gastric mucosa previously reported by many studies is not restricted to local infected gastric tissue but also detected in gastric fluid and sera of H. pylori-positive subjects and may have an important role in the pathogenesis and development of common gastric diseases.
...
PMID:Serum and gastric fluid levels of cytokines and nitrates in gastric diseases infected with Helicobacter pylori. 1516 24
In this study, the effects of Centella asiatica water extract (CE) and its active constituent, asiaticoside (AC), on the expression and activity of inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) during
gastric ulcer
healing in rats were investigated. CE was prepared from Centella asiatica dry plant and the concentration of AC in CE was quantitatively determined with the use of high performance liquid chromatography analysis. Different concentrations of CE (0.10 g/kg and 0.25 g/kg) and AC (5 mg/kg and 10 mg/kg) were orally administered to rats with acetic acid-induced gastric ulcers. They were found to reduce the size of the ulcers at days 1, 3 and 7 after ulcer induction in a dose-dependent manner, with a concomitant attenuation of iNOS activity and protein expression at the ulcer tissues. The levels of nitrite and
nitrate
(NO(X)-), the stable end-products of nitric oxide (NO), in the
gastric ulcer
tissues were also decreased. N-[3-(aminomethyl)benzyl]acetamidine (1400W), a highly selective inhibitor of iNOS, was found to produce similar but more potent inhibition on iNOS activity at a dose of 0.1 mg/kg. These findings indicate that CE and AC have an anti-inflammatory property that is brought about by inhibition of NO synthesis and thus facilitates ulcer healing.
...
PMID:Inhibitory effects of Centella asiatica water extract and asiaticoside on inducible nitric oxide synthase during gastric ulcer healing in rats. 1564 49
Despite the fact that dietary habits and lifestyles are incredibly advancing, gastric ulceration is still a terrible complaint. Extensive use of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) and alcohol, in addition to stress, are all predisposing factors for ulcers. Most medical treatments are always time consuming and not efficient or satisfactory to the patients. Cardiovascular patients always need NSAIDs, or mostly cannot quit alcohols, while using many cardiovascular drugs. We aim to study a possible benefit of a common nitrogen oxide donor, anti-anginal drug, nicorandil [N-(2-hydroxyethyl) nicotinamide
nitrate
ester], in managing acute gastric ulcers through studying its effect on some relevant intermediates to ulcerogenesis as lipid peroxidation, tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha), and nitric oxide (NO). In addition, gastric mucosal histology was studied to pursue the drug effects on tissue level. Our study revealed that both indomethacin and alcohol induced
gastric ulcer
mainly through up-regulation of gastric mucosal lipid peroxidation, local tissue inflammation, leukocytic infiltration, and necrosis. Both ulcerogens significantly elevated TNF-alpha and decreased NO, initiating ulcer formation. Nicorandil pretreatment depicted a higher preventive index in indomethacin- (89.8%) and alcohol-induced (77.7%) acute ulceration. On the tissue level, it also protected the gastric mucosa combating leukocyte infiltration and tissue congestion. Nicorandil protected tissue necrosis through decreasing oxidative stress, elevating NO levels, and down-regulating the ulcerogen-induced TNF-alpha elevation and improved sub-mucosal blood supply. We conclude that nicorandil may be a suitable bimodal treatment for cardiovascular patients who are at high risk of gastric ulcers by using variable analgesics to alleviate possible cardiac pain episodes, and probably frequent doses will offer a more established and long-lasting protection.
...
PMID:Gastroprotective effect of nicorandil in indomethacin and alcohol-induced acute ulcers. 1893 48
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