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 its efficacy and safety in treating obesity, a silicone-rubber balloon was passed into the stomach of 10 nondieting, obese subjects. In a counterbalanced sequence, the balloon was inflated with 400 mL for 1 mo and deflated for 1 mo. Lower intakes of solid and liquid test meals (NS), significantly slower gastric emptying, and concomitant changes in glucose, insulin, glucagon, and cholecystokinin concentrations consistent with slower emptying resulted during balloon inflation. After balloon inflation, one small gastric ulcer developed, which subsequently healed. Significant weight loss occurred during the second and third week of the inflation period (F[1,9] = 5.0, p less than 0.05). However, the weight loss was small and the significant effect did not continue through the fourth week.
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PMID:Gastric balloon to treat obesity: a double-blind study in nondieting subjects. 218 57

Duodeno-gastric reflux has been studied in normal subjects and patients with duodenal and gastric ulceration during the responses to parenteral secretin and cholecystokinin-pancreozymin and to acidification of the small intestine. Reflux was absent or slight in normal subjects and most patients with duodenal ulcer but was appreciable in most patients with gastric ulcer. Duodeno-gastric regurgitation may occasionally resultin a misleading assessment of pancreatic exocrine secretory capacity.
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PMID:Aspects of duodeno-gastric reflux in man. 503 39

We studied reflux of duodenal contents into the stomach in patients with gastric ulcers, patients with duodenal ulcers, and normal subjects. Duodenogastric reflux was assessed in the fasting state and after cholecystokinin octapeptide administration (0.02 micrograms/kg intravenously). Slight reflux was observed in the fasting state in all three groups. However, after cholecystokinin octapeptide administration, reflux was significantly greater in gastric ulcer patients than in control patients for pancreatic phospholipase A2 (p less than 0.01) and lysophosphatidylcholine (p less than 0.001). Also in gastric ulcer patients, the gastric contents were significantly more alkaline (pH 5.26 +/- 0.58, p less than 0.001) during duodenogastric reflux than in normal subjects (pH 3.65 +/- 0.50) or duodenal ulcer patients (pH 2.67 +/- 0.63). Our results suggest that reflux of both pancreatic and biliary secretions might contribute to the gastric mucosal injury in gastric ulcer patients and we postulate that pancreatic phospholipase A2 might have a greater role in this process than has been previously acknowledged.
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PMID:Duodenogastric reflux in patients with gastric ulcer disease. 669 Jun 37

99mTc-diethyl-IDA is completely excreted into the bile. When cholecystokinin is given after priming of the biliary tract with this tracer, gallbladder contraction leads to expulsion of bile into the duodenum. At the same time cholecystokinin causes contraction of the pylorus, which should normally prevent substantial reflux of tracer into the stomach. We have applied these physiological characteristics in a method to quantify biliary gastric reflux. Fourteen controls had a median reflux of 4.3% of the intravenous dose (93% of controls had values less than 9%). In 18 patients with Billroth II gastrectomies the median reflux was 46% (p less than 0.001). Patients with chronic gastritis (no. = 18) had also increased reflux (median 18.1%, p less than 0.001). The same was found in gastric ulcer (no. = 18, median 11.8%, p less than 0.003). In duodenal ulcer (no. = 7) increased reflux existed in only two patients with pyloric deformation. Patients with hiatal hernia did not show increased reflux (no. = 10, median 2.2%). Bilirubin measurements tended to underestimate reflux in pathological cases, whereas bile acid measurements and reflux percentages of tracer showed a close relationship (r = 0.87, p less than 0.001).
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PMID:A simple method for the quantification of biliary reflux. 720 86

Bombesin has been shown to have trophic effects on the gastrointestinal tissue. Bombesin has direct mitogenic effects besides stimulating release of gastric hormones. The aim of this study was to investigate the effect of bombesin in hemorrhagic shock-induced stress ulcers in rats, and the role of cholecystokinin (CCK) receptors in this activity. Hemorrhagic shock was created by withdrawing 3 ml blood/200 g b.w. of rats. At the end of the 1-hour hypovolemic shock period, histological analysis, gastric ulcer index, gastric myeloperoxidase activity and gastric protein oxidation levels were determined. When given before the hemorrhage, subcutaneous bombesin (10 microg/kg) reduced macroscopically gastric ulcer index (p < 0.05). Blockade of CCK-A receptors with intraperitoneal MK-329 (1 mg/kg) did not reverse bombesin-induced gastroprotection. Blockade of CCK-B receptors with intraperitoneal L-365,260 (25 mg/kg) reversed bombesin-induced gastroprotection. Blockade of the two receptors resulted in no gastroprotection at all. It is concluded that bombesin treatment attenuated hemorrhagic shock-induced stress ulcers in rats via CCK receptors.
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PMID:Role of bombesin and cholecystokinin receptors in gastric injury induced by hemorrhagic shock in the rat. 1271 34