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Query: UMLS:C0038358 (
gastric ulcer
)
5,179
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The relation of atrophic gastritis, other gastric lesions and lifestyle factors to stomach cancer risk was prospectively studied among 3,914 subjects who underwent gastroscopic examination and responded to a questionnaire survey at the Aichi Cancer Center Hospital. During 4.4 years of follow-up on average, 45 incident cases of stomach cancer were identified at least three months after the initial examination. If the baseline endoscopic findings indicated the presence of atrophic gastritis, the risk of developing stomach cancer was increased 5.73-fold, compared with no indication at the baseline. The risk further increased with advancing degree of atrophy and increasing extension of atrophy on the lesser curvature. These trends in the relative risks were statistically significant (P = 0.027 and P = 0.041, respectively). The risk of developing stomach cancer was statistically significantly increased among subjects with gastric polyps, but not among those with
gastric ulcer
. Stomach cancer cases tended to consume more cigarettes, alcohol, rice, pickles and salted fish
gut
/cod roe and less fruits and vegetables and to have more family histories of stomach cancer than noncases, although these differences were not statistically significant. The results of the present study provide additional evidence on the relation between atrophic gastritis and stomach cancer and suggest a need for intensive follow-up of patients with atrophic gastritis and gastric polyps.
...
PMID:A prospective study of atrophic gastritis and stomach cancer risk. 148 28
Pronounced changes in
gut
neuropeptide content have been observed in colonic tissues from animals with acute experimental colitis and in some patients with inflammatory bowel disease. The early decrease of CGRP in the colon during colitis in the animal studies suggest that CGRP is released during the inflammatory process. No data are available showing the biological action of released CGRP during inflammation. The sensory neurotoxin capsaicin was used in animal studies to examine the effect of sensory nerves on inflammation and healing in experimental animal models. The severity of colitis was enhanced after capsaicin pretreatment in acute and chronic animal models of colitis. These data support the hypothesis that sensory nerves exert a protective and healing-promoting function in the
gut
. CGRP is a good candidate for this action of sensory nerves because it is a major component in sensory nerve fibers. How CGRP exerts its protective function in the intestine is unknown. Data from
gastric ulcer
models support the hypothesis that a main action of CGRP is regulation of mesenteric and mucosal blood flow resulting in enhanced protection and tissue healing. Other effector roles of CGRP afferent nerve endings could also be considered.
...
PMID:Calcitonin gene-related peptide in inflammatory bowel disease and experimentally induced colitis. 163 91
During a 15-year period Haemophilus species were isolated from unusual anatomical sites in 80 patients, mostly adults. The origin of specimens was pus and swabs from suppurative lesions, fluids from serosal cavities and gall bladder,
gut
content, and blood in cases with a supposed tissue focus. In 17 patients Haemophilus species were isolated in pure culture, in 63 patients in conjunction with other bacteria. 17 patients had gynaecological complaints: bartholinitis, salpingitis, and vaginal discharge. 22 patients had gastrointestinal complaints, comprising 17 with appendicitis, peritonitis following perforation of
gastric ulcer
, gall-duct infections, and an abscess in the stomach wall, and 5 patients with colonization of the
gut
. 41 patients had soft tissue and bone infections.
...
PMID:Haemophilus isolated from unusual anatomical sites. 221 6
The calcium channel antagonists verapamil and nifedipine were examined for their effects on conscious basal gastric acid output, stress ulcer formation and on ethanol-induced ulcers. Both compounds significantly reduced gastric acid secretion, however verapamil did so in a dose-related manner. Both verapamil and nifedipine significantly attenuated stress
gastric ulcer
formation. Nifedipine, at a dose of 32.0 mg kg-1, virtually abolished stress ulcers. Verapamil exacerbated, while nifedipine, at 32.0 mg kg-1, attenuated ethanol-induced gastric ulcers. The differential gastrointestinal effects of these calcium channel antagonists support the existence of multiple classes of calcium channels in the
gut
and suggest an important role for intracellular calcium and hence, its blockade, in gastric pathophysiology.
...
PMID:Verapamil and nifedipine effects on gastric acid secretion and ulcer formation in rats. 290 96
Increased duodenogastric reflux has been recognized as a cause of gastric mucosa damage. The frequent finding of bile-stained gastric juice and a suggested higher frequency of lesions of the gastric mucosa in patients with Chagas' disease, which is characterized by a marked reduction of myenteric neurons, suggest that impairment of intrinsic innervation of the
gut
might be associated with increased duodenogastric reflux. Duodenogastric bile reflux was quantified after intravenous injection of 99mtechnetium-HIDA, in 18 patients with chronic Chagas' disease, 12 controls, and 7 patients with Billroth II gastrectomy. All but one of the chagasic patients were submitted to upper digestive tract endoscopy. High reflux values (greater than or equal to 10%) were detected both in chagasic patients and in the controls, but the values for both groups were significantly lower (P less than 0.01) than those obtained for Billroth II patients (median: 55.79%; range: 12.58-87.22%). Reflux values tended to be higher in the Chagas' disease group (median: 8.20%; range: 0.0-29.40%) than in the control group (median: 3.20%; range: 0.0-30.64%), with no statistical difference between the two groups (P greater than 0.10). Chronic gastritis was detected by endoscopy in 12 chagasic patients, benign
gastric ulcer
in 2 patients, and a pool of bile in the stomach in 11 patients. However, neither the occurrence of gastric lesions nor the finding of bile-stained gastric juice was associated with high reflux values after [99mTc]HIDA injection. This study suggests that lesions of the intramural nervous system of the
gut
in Chagas' disease do not appear to be associated with abnormally increased duodenogastric reflux.
...
PMID:Duodenogastric reflux in Chagas' disease. 313 77
Gastric ulcer
(GU) and duodenal ulcer (DU) occur as a result of the imbalance between aggressive and defensive factors affecting the gastroduodenal mucosa. Prostaglandins (PG) of E and I series are generated throughout the gastrointestinal tract, particularly in the gastric and duodenal mucosa, and are released into the
gut
lumen upon vagal and hormonal stimulation. Endogenous PGs may be involved in the maintenance of mucosal integrity, control of mucosal blood flow and protection against potentially noxious agents. Gastric mucosa of ulcer patients tends to generate smaller amounts of PGs of E and I series and exhibits a reduced ratio of PG to thromboxane generation, which suggests that the deficiency of protective PG may play a role in the pathogenesis of peptic ulcer. Suppression of mucosal generation of PGs by non-steroidal anti-inflammatory compounds causes mucosal damage and increases the risk of the formation or exacerbation of peptic ulcer. Exogenous PGE and its stable analogs have been tested successfully in the treatment of GU and DU and the results so far obtained indicate that these agents significantly increase the ulcer healing rate. Certain anti-ulcer drugs such as carbenoxolone, sucralfate, colloidal bismuth and cimetidine appear to exert their beneficial effects on ulcer healing by mediating the release of endogenous PGs.
...
PMID:Prostaglandins in pathophysiology of peptic ulcer disease. 386 51
Gastric acid secretion, incidence of gastric mucosal lesion, and
gut
hormone responses were studied in 24 patients with liver cirrhosis. Gastric acid output in these subjects showed normal acidity and was nearly similar to that in patients with
gastric ulcer
. The incidence of gastric mucosal lesion was high, especially in patients whose plasma disappearance rate of indocyanine green was low. Plasma levels of both gastrin and gastric inhibitory polypeptide were higher in cirrhotic patients than in control subjects both in the fasting state and after the ingestion of a test meal. Gel chromatography of the postprandial plasma of cirrhotics showed a higher immunoreactivity at the second peak than in controls. This is because cirrhotics have a higher percentage of authentic gastric inhibitory polypeptide, although the elution patterns were similar in both groups. It is suggested that impairment of extraction of some molecular components of both gastrin and gastric inhibitory polypeptide may occur in the cirrhotic liver.
...
PMID:Gastric acid secretion and gastrin and gastric inhibitory polypeptide release in cirrhotic patients. 388 51
The role of histamine in the
gut
is reviewed in relation to gastric secretion of acid, pepsin and intrinsic factors. Species-dependence of some of these actions are also discussed. Interactions with other agonists and antagonists in intact and isolated systems provide the basis for models of the role of histamine in control of gastric secretion. This review deals further with histamine H1 and H2 effects on gastrointestinal circulation and musculature including sphincters. The most dramatic application of the development of histamine H2 antagonists has been in the treatment of duodenal ulcer. The use of H2 antagonists in the treatment of duodenal and
gastric ulcer
, gastrinoma, gastritis, and esophagitis is critically evaluated.
...
PMID:Histamine and the gut. 391 79
Conventional transcutaneous ultrasound examinations are often compromised by intervening pulmonary or bowel gas and have limited resolution. Ultrasonic probes of frequencies greater than 5 MHz, which enhance resolution, cannot be used successfully on the skin surface, because they do not penetrate deeply enough to view intraabdominal organs in most adults. To overcome these problems, we tested an ultrasonic endoscope which had a 10-MHz, 64-element linear assay, generated real-time images at resolutions of less than 1 mm, and was an integral part of a 35-mm-long and 13-mm-wide endoscopic rigid tip. Thirty-two studies were performed in 15 healthy subjects, 4 patients with pancreatic cancer and 6 patients with chronic pancreatitis, and 1 patient each with a
gastric ulcer
and a suspected pancreatic abscess. We demonstrated that this procedure is safe, provides high resolution real-time ultrasound visualization of the heart, aorta, spleen, pancreas, liver, gallbladder, kidneys, and gastrointestinal mucosa and can detect moderate-sized pancreatic tumors and hepatic metastases less than 1 cm in diameter. Because endoscopic visualization of gastrointestinal mucosa and ultrasound examination of extraluminal organs can be obtained during a single procedure, rapid differentiation among mucosal and intramural disease of the hollow
gut
and disease of extraluminal organs should be possible with this diagnostic technique.
...
PMID:Human endoscopic ultrasonography. 710 13
From May 1993 to May 1998 at our hospital 12 classic gastric resections were operated on by laparoscopic procedure. A 2/3 distal Billroth resection was performed in 5 patients, for
gastric ulcer
(2) and for GIST (3). Other 7 patients were curatively operated on for a malignant disease. Any case was resected by oncosurgical gastrectomy including a D2-lymphadenectomy. The histological diagnoses were an adenocarcinoma in 6 cases, and one highly malignant maltoma. The mean operating time was 230 min in Billroth I resections and 295 min in total gastrectomies. As a complication, we saw postoperatively a duodenal leakage in one case, we could successfully manage also laparoscopically on the day after the operation. All the courses were extremely uncomplicated, connected with rapid mobility, early
gut
motility, little pain, and a comfortable cosmetic result. The resection result in any case of malignoma was R0, the mean lymphonode amount was 34. Tumour cell dissemination and trokar site metastases we could'nt note either. Oncosurgically, there are no disadvantages in comparison to the open approach.
...
PMID:[Initial experience with laparoscopic gastrectomy in benign and malignant tumors]. 1035 92
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