It has long been thought that duodenal reflux induces residual gastritis after distal gastrectomy. H. pylori infection appears to be another factor in residual gastritis; and H. pylori induced gastritis may exist preoperatively or may have been introduced postoperatively. Up until now, the surgical effect itself and H. pylori infection have not been well differentiated as causes of residual gastritis. Our aim in this study was to clarify the relationship between the surgical effect and H. pylori infection in residual gastritis. A residual gastritis model using the Mongolian gerbil has been established with microsurgical technique. Residual gastritis with and without H. pylori infection has been studied by histopathological examination and quantitated by Rauws' score. The expression of cyclooxygenase (both COX-1 and COX-2) has also been examined immunohistologically. Elevation of pH in gastric juice after surgery was confirmed. H. pylori infection led to deterioration after surgery. The postoperative Rauws' score with infection is higher than without infection. Levels of COX-1 were higher after surgery in both animals. COX-2 was not expressed in the animals without infection and only a little was expressed in the animals with infection. COX-2 was strongly expressed in the operated animals with infection, but the surgical effect was minute in the animals without infection. Residual gastritis consisted of both surgical gastritis and H. pylori gastritis. H. pylori gastritis is curable with eradication of the organism, but surgical gastritis is not. The COX inhibitor can be a good candidate in preventing residual gastritis after eradication of the H. pylori organism. The clinical implications of COX expression for patients with residual gastritis might deserve further study in the point of treatment of surgical and H. pylori gastritis.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00268-002-6460-z | DOI Listing |
Bioinformatics
November 2024
Department of Artificial Intelligence, Beijing Key Lab of Traffic Data Analysis and Mining, School of Computer Science & Technology, Beijing Jiaotong University, Beijing 100044, China.
Motivation: Drug repositioning (DR), identifying novel indications for approved drugs, is a cost-effective strategy in drug discovery. Despite numerous proposed DR models, integrating network-based features, differential gene expression, and chemical structures for high-performance DR remains challenging.
Results: We propose a comprehensive deep pretraining and fine-tuning framework for DR, termed DrugRepPT.
Asian J Endosc Surg
October 2024
Department of Surgery, National Defense Medical College, Tokorozawa, Japan.
J Gastric Cancer
October 2024
Department of Internal Medicine, Seoul National University College of Medicine, Seoul, Korea.
Medicine (Baltimore)
September 2024
Department of Gastroenterology, Jiangxi Provincial Key Laboratory of Digestive Diseases, Jiangxi Clinical Research Center for Gastroenterology, Digestive Disease Hospital, The First Affiliated Hospital, Jiangxi Medical College, Nanchang University, Nanchang, Jiangxi, China.
World J Surg Oncol
April 2024
Department of General Surgery, The First Affiliated Hospital, Dalian Medical University, Dalian, Liaoning Province, 116011, China.
Background: To investigate the short-term and long-term outcomes of preserving the celiac branch of the vagus nerve during laparoscopic distal gastrectomy.
Methods: A total of 149 patients with prospective diagnosis of gastric cancer who underwent laparoscopic-assisted distal gastrectomy (LADG) combined with Billroth-II anastomosis and D2 lymph node dissection between 2017 and 2018 were retrospectively analyzed. The patients were divided into the preserved LADG group (P-LADG, n = 56) and the resected LADG group (R-LADG, n = 93) according to whether the vagus nerve celiac branch was preserved.
Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!