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)

A joint prospective long term study of gastric biopsies has been undertaken to survey intestinal metaplasia Types I, II, and III in terms of their incidence, distribution and value in the selection of high risk cancer patients. This study is based on protocols agreed between three centres for endoscopy, histological interpretation, and mucin histochemistry. The results on the first 1350 gastric biopsies examined during 1981-1982 are presented. Intestinal metaplasia was found in 267 biopsies (20%), being common in association with carcinoma (71%), less so in benign conditions such as gastric ulcer (39%), and chronic gastritis (24%), but rare in 'normal' (3%). Type I intestinal metaplasia was predominant (73%) in all the biopsies with intestinal metaplasia and was most common in benign conditions, 70% in gastric ulcer and 76% in chronic gastritis. Type III intestinal metaplasia (incomplete sulphomucin-secreting intestinal metaplasia) was recorded in only 9.8% of all the biopsies with intestinal metaplasia and had a higher incidence in carcinoma (35%), than in benign conditions (7%) (p less than 0.0001). These results suggest that intestinal metaplasia types may have different malignant potential and their identification may be useful in screening patients for early detection of cancer.
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PMID:Incomplete sulphomucin-secreting intestinal metaplasia for gastric cancer. Preliminary data from a prospective study from three centres. 408 8

Intestinal metaplasia of the human stomach was classified into two types, complete and incomplete. The complete type was associated with the intestinal marker enzymes sucrose alpha-D-glucohydrolase, alpha, alpha-trehalase, aminopeptidase (microsomal) (APM), and alkaline phosphatase (ALP). Tissue of this type contained goblet cells and Paneth's cells but not high-iron diamine (HID)-positive mucin staining with HID-Alcian blue. The incomplete type of intestinal metaplasia was associated with sucrose alpha-D-glucohydrolase, APM, goblet cells, and HID-positive mucin but not with alpha, alpha-trehalase, ALP, or Paneth's cells. For the examination of the distribution of the complete and incomplete types in 84, 27, and 16 resected specimens of human stomach with gastric carcinoma, gastric ulcer, and duodenal ulcer, respectively, disaccharidases were located with Tes-Tape. Specimens with intestinal metaplasia were divided into three classes: complete type only (class I), incomplete type only (class II), and a mixture of areas of the complete and incomplete types (class III). Of the 84 specimens from patients with gastric carcinoma, intestinal metaplasia was found in 76 (01%), and the percentages of specimens of classes I, II, and III were 32, 22, and 46, respectively. In these specimens, the percent incidence of class I increased and that of class II decreased with age. Of the 27 specimens from patients with gastric ulcer, 16 (59%) shopwed intestinal metaplasia and 10 of the 16 (63%) specimens were of class II. Of the 16 specimens from patients with duodenal ulcer, only 3 (19%) specimens showed intestinal metaplasia and all of them were of class II. The relationships of the complete and incomplete types of intestinal metaplasia to gastric carcinoma wre studied in 26 foci of minute carcinoma of the stomach less than 5 mm in largest diameter. Nineteen of 20 (05%) foci of the intestinal type of minute carcinoma were surrounded by intestinal metaplasia and 16 foci (80%) were surrounded by the incomplete type of intestinal metaplasia.
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PMID:Distribution of marker enzymes and mucin in intestinal metaplasia in human stomach and relation to complete and incomplete types of intestinal metaplasia to minute gastric carcinomas. 693 Dec 45

A 25-year old woman presented with microangiopathic hemolytic anemia, a leucoerythroblastic peripheral blood picture and a benign appearing gastric ulcer. Bone marrow trephine biopsy revealed metastatic mucin producing adenocarcinoma and gastroscopy with biopsy confirmed a gastric primary. Combination chemotherapy provided temporary symptomatic improvement but the patient expired seven months later. A review of gastric carcinoma in patients less than 30 years old is given. Symptoms of peptic ulcer disease are common and radiographs may demonstrate benign appearing gastric ulcers. Carcinoma is infrequently suspected and delays in diagnosis may contribute to a poor prognosis.
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PMID:Gastric carcinoma in young people. A case report and review of the literature. 721 12

The effect of lansoprazole, a new benzimidazole proton pump inhibitor, on the relationship between ulcer healing and changes in mucin content was studied in gastric ulcer patients. Twenty-one outpatients with active gastric ulcers received lansoprazole 30 mg once daily given in the morning for 8 weeks. The gastric mucin content was examined by HPLC analysis of hexosamines in gastric biopsy specimens obtained from the lesser curvature of the pylorus and the greater curvature of the upper body. The ulcer healing rate for lansoprazole was 85.7% at 8 weeks. The mucin content of both mucosal regions significantly decreased to approximately 70% (pylorus 70.9%; upper body 74.7%) of the value before drug treatment. The results of this study demonstrate that 30 mg lansoprazole once daily is remarkably effective in healing gastric ulcers because of its potent acid suppression. It appears that acid inhibition is the primary factor in initial treatment. However, maintaining an altered gastric mucosal defense mechanism may have implications for the long-term treatment of gastric ulcers.
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PMID:Effects of lansoprazole on gastric ulcer healing and mucin content. 759 39

Peroxidative tissue damage has been reported to contribute to several pathological disorders. Despite high exposure to both exogenous and endogenous oxidant stress, the strong cell defence mechanism of the gastric mucosa protects mucosal epithelial cells against these noxious stimuli. However, some environmental factors involved in lipid peroxidation (such as cadmium), which disrupt gastric mucosal protection, may impair the mucosal barrier and facilitate the occurrence of gastric ulcers. In an experimental study to investigate this hypothesis, the level of cadmium-induced lipid peroxidation products (TBARS) and an antioxidant enzyme (SOD) were investigated. The mucin content (P < 0.01) and prostaglandin levels (P < 0.05) of mucosa as components of the gastric mucosal barrier were found to be significantly reduced in rats exposed to 15 ppm of cadmium in water for 30 days when compared with those of unexposed controls. TBARS levels in blood (P < 0.05) and mucosa (P < 0.001) increased markedly in cadmium-exposed animals whereas blood SOD levels remained unchanged. The significant correlation between TBARS and mucosal cadmium (r = 0.664, P < 0.01), as well as between cadmium and PGE2 (r = -0.719, P < 0.01), led to the conclusion that cadmium-induced lipid peroxidation is involved in the increased vulnerability of gastric mucosa to injurious stimuli in rats. This susceptibility may be responsible for the high incidence of stress-induced gastric ulcer in the population.
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PMID:Role of lipid peroxidation in cadmium-induced impairment of the gastric mucosal barrier. 792 76

The acute gastric ulcer rat models were induced by dehydrated alcohol, 0.6 N hydrochloric acid and 0.6 N sodium hydroxide, and the chronic gastric ulcer rat models were established by means of acetic acid, the protective effect of Chinese medicine "Wei Tong Ling" (WTL) on gastric mucous membrane was studied. Using histochemical mucin stain, AgNOR stain and immunohistochemical technique the regenerated mucosa of healed gastric ulcer induced by acetic acid in rats was observed quantitatively. They were compared with that of WTL. The results showed that the regenerated mucosa of healed gastric ulcer might be the morphological basis for the recurrence of gastric ulcer and be associated with canceration. WTL could not only accelerate the healing of ulcer but also raise the quality of gastric ulcerous healing which was beneficial for the prevention of ulcer recurrence and canceration. The protective effect of WTL on gastric mucosa was confirmed by various assays.
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PMID:[Protective effect of "wei tong ling" on gastric mucosa and influence on quality of gastric ulcer healing]. 870 29

Oxygen free radicals have been implicated in the pathogenesis of gastrointestinal mucosal injury. However, their effect on the quality of experimental gastric ulcer healing has not been investigated previously. Gastric ulcers were produced on the anterior wall of the stomach of rats by submucosal injection of 20% acetic acid. To investigate the role of oxygen radicals, rats with gastric ulcers were treated with scavengers for 6 weeks. Rats received either a daily dose of 20,000 U/kg of recombinant human Cu,Zn-SOD, a 1% solution of DMSO administered orally ad libitum, or 50 mg/kg/day of allopurinol administered orally. The quality of ulcer healing was evaluated by histologic and biochemical parameters: ulcer area, lipid peroxide levels, abnormality of regenerated mucosa, angiogenesis, and fibrosis as assessed by Azan staining, mucin content as assessed by the PAS-positive area, and polymorphonuclear leukocyte (PMN) infiltration. The treatments with SOD, DMSO, or allopurinol did not affect the ulcer area or lipid peroxide levels in the gastric mucosa, and SOD did not affect the histologic abnormality score, PMN infiltration in regenerated mucosa, the collagen fiber proliferation index, or the PAS-positive mucous score. DMSO and allopurinol significantly increased the collagen fiber proliferation index and the PAS-positive mucous score compared with controls. These results indicate that scavenging hydroxyl radicals or inhibiting xanthine oxidase enhances the quality but not the speed of gastric ulcer healing.
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PMID:Effects of oxygen radical scavengers on the quality of gastric ulcer healing in rats. 877 96

The effect of drugs for gastritis and gastric ulcer (ecabet sodium, gefarnate, teprenone, and troxipide) on the secretion of mucin-like glycoproteins from rat cornea were investigated in vitro and on a short-term, rabbit dry eye model in vivo. For the studies in vitro, cultured rat cornea sections (3 mm diameter) were incubated with radiolabeled sodium sulfate, rinsed, and then incubated for 30 min in the presence of one of the drugs. The culture media were reacted with Dolichos biflorus agglutinate (DBA)-lectin, and the radioactivity of DBA-bound mucin-like glycoproteins was measured. A cytotoxicity assay confirmed that mucin-like glycoproteins had not leaked from damaged cells. For studies in vivo, eye drop vehicle or drops containing gefarnate were instilled in the eyes of nine anesthetized rabbits, and then the eyes were kept open with specula for two hours. These rabbits and two control rabbits not subjected to ocular drying were killed, and their eyes were enucleated and stained with methylene blue. Corneal epithelial damage from desiccation was evaluated based on the extent of methylene blue staining. Among the four kinds of drugs for gastritis and gastric ulcers, only gefarnate significantly increased the mucin-like glycoprotein secretion from cultured rat corneas in vitro; this stimulatory effect of gefarnate was dose-dependent. In vivo, the instillation of gefarnate reduced corneal epithelial damage from desiccation in a dose-dependent fashion. These results suggest that gefarnate reduces desiccation of corneal epithelium, perhaps by stimulating secretion of mucin-like glycoproteins from corneal epithelium.
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PMID:Gefarnate stimulates secretion of mucin-like glycoproteins by corneal epithelium in vitro and protects corneal epithelium from desiccation in vivo. 946 89

The biosynthesis of sulfated mucin in gastric tissue was investigated in cold-stress and indomethacin (CSI)-induced gastric ulcer models. To examine the synthesis of gastric sulfated mucin, [35S]H2SO4 (sulfate) incorporation into gastric mucin was measured. The treatment of CSI inhibited the incorporation of [35S]sulfate after 2 hr. The gastric acid hypersecretion or the formation of severe ulcer was observed at 1 or 4 hr after the CSI-treatment, respectively. Pibutidine hydrochloride (IT-066), a novel H2-receptor antagonist, (0.3 mg/kg, s.c.) inhibited the formation of ulcer and reversed the inhibition of mucin sulfation by the CSI-treatment, whereas atropine sulfate, a muscarinic receptor antagonist, (1.0 mg/kg, s.c.) did not inhibit the development of ulcer nor decrease in the mucin sulfation at 6 hr after the CSI-treatment. IT-066 inhibited the total acid output (T.A.O.) due to the reduction of the acidity in the gastric juice, whereas atropine inhibited the T.A.O. due to that of the volume. These results indicated that a different mode of action between IT-066 and atropine on gastric acid secretion influences their actions in the incorporation of [35S]sulfate and the formation of ulcer in the CSI-treated rat. Therefore, it is considered that the reduction of biosynthesis of gastric sulfated mucin following acid hypersecretion may be responsible for the formation of gastric ulcer.
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PMID:Effect of cold-stress and indomethacin on the biosynthesis of gastric sulfated mucin in rats. 946 26

Hange-shashin-to (HST) is a traditional Chinese herbal prescription (Banxia Xiexin Tang) which has long been used in the therapy of gastric functional disorders. In this report, the effect of HST extract on water-immersion restraint stress-induced gastric ulcer based on the changes in gastric mucin content and the variations of monoamine contents in hypothalamus were investigated. Ulcer index was microscopically measured by the sum total of the lengths of ulcers in glandular stomach. Gastric mucin content was determined by a PAS-staining methods and the monoamine contents were detected by HPLC-ECD method. HST extract was orally administered at 1, 2 and 3 g/kg for three consecutive days before stress exposure. Water-immersion restraint stress decreased the mucin content and produced gastric ulcers in a restraint time-dependent manner. Pretreatment with HST extract markedly inhibited the reduction of gastric mucin content and the development of gastric ulcer with significant differences (p < or = 0.01). The remarkable decrease of NE and 5-HT contents but prominent increases of MHPG and 5-HIAA contents were observed in hypothalamus after water-immersion restraint stress (p < or = 0.01). Those changes in monoamine contests in hypothalamus were also significantly inhibited by the pretreatment with HST extract at higher dosage (p < or = 0.05). These results indicate that the changes in gastric mucin content and the variation of monoamines in hypothalamus relate to the pathogenesis of water-immersion restraint stress-induced gastric ulcers, and it is suggested that the prophylactic effects of HST extract on stress induced gastric ulcers may be associated with an increase in gastric mucin content, although the prevention of HST extract on the extraordinary changes in monoamine contents in hypothalamus due to stress cannot be ruled out.
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PMID:Protective effects of Hange-shashin-to on water-immersion restraint stress-induced gastric ulcers. 957 80


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