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Original Article

Helicobacter pylori in Dyspeptic Patients: Quantitative Association with Severity of Gastritis, Intragastric pH, and Serum Gastrin Concentration

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Pages 124-134 | Published online: 08 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

The relationship between different features of gastric mucosal inflammation, intragastric pH and serum gastrin concentration and the distribution and quantity of Helicobacter pylori was studied in a series of 107 dyspepsia patients. H. pylori was identified in 62 cases (59%), and its presence was associated with increased amounts of mononuclear inflammatory cells and neutrophilic and eosinophilic leucocytes in both the antrum and the corpus. The number of H. pylori in the antral mucosa was significantly associated with the quantity of mononuclear inflammatory cells. It was also associated with glandular atrophy in antral mucosa, so that slight and moderate glandular atrophy were significantly more common in cases with abundant H. pylori. Intragastric pH and serum gastrin concentration were inversely related to the number of H. pylori in both the antral and corpus mucosa. H. pylori positive patients were also divided into groups according to proportions of H. pylori in the antral and corpus mucosa. In 5 of these patients (8%) the bacteria were present only in the corpus, and this group had a significantly more pronounced degree of glandular atrophy in the corpus mucosa, higher intragastric pH and a higher serum gastrin concentration than the other H. pylori positive patients. The other patients with a higher corpus H. pylori than antral H. pylori score (n = 25; 34%) also had a significantly higher intragastric pH and serum gastrin concentration than those with a corpus H. pylori score lower than or equal to the antral score, while the latter had more severe inflammation in the antral mucosa and a lower intragastric pH and serum gastrin concentration. The results suggest that inflammation in the antrum forms a favourable environment for H. pylori, while atrophy of the corpus glands, being connected with increased pH, leads to a diminished amount of H. pylori. They thus support the view that proliferation of H. pylori is dependent on acid produced by the corpus mucosa.

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