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13C urea breath test (UBT) in the diagnosis of Helicobacter pylori: why does it work better with acid test meals? | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Acid test meals may enhance the accuracy of the (13)C urea breath test (UBT) for detecting Helicobacter pylori by affecting urease activity rather than gastric emptying.
  • A study involving H pylori infected volunteers found that acidified meals significantly increased urease activity and (13)CO(2) excretion compared to neutral meals, regardless of the gastric emptying rates.
  • The results suggest that the increased efficacy of acidified meals in UBTs is likely due to the activation of urease in intact bacteria rather than changes in how quickly the stomach empties.

Article Abstract

Background: Acid test meals may improve the accuracy of the (13)C urea breath test (UBT). This has been attributed to changes in gastric emptying rather than to the effects of gastric pH on Helicobacter pylori urease.

Aims: To determine whether enhancement of (13)CO(2) excretion in the UBT in H pylori infected volunteers by acidification of a test meal is due to a delay in gastric emptying.

Methods: Urease activity in vitro was measured in intact bacteria and in bacterial homogenates. Urease activity in vivo was assessed by means of the UBT. Eleven H pylori infected subjects underwent UBTs with neutral Ensure (pH 7.0), acidified Ensure (pH 3.0), and apple juice (pH 3.0). Gastric emptying was assessed by (13)C sodium acetate breath test.

Results: From pH 7 to pH 3, the in vitro urease activity of intact bacteria increased sixfold. In contrast, urease activity of bacterial homogenates was inactivated by low pH. In vivo, urease activity, as measured by the UBT 20 minutes after meal ingestion, was higher with apple juice (delta (13)CO(2)=21.1; p=0.03) and acidified Ensure (delta (13)CO(2)=25.5; p=0.01) than with neutral Ensure (delta (13)CO(2)=12.5). Gastric emptying was faster with apple juice (T(max)=36.7 (8) minutes) but not with acidified Ensure (T(max)=63.3 (5) minutes; p=0.06) than with neutral Ensure (T(max)=65.0 (3) minutes; p=0.04).

Conclusions: The higher UBT found with acidified compared with neutral test meals was independent of the emptying rates of the test meals but may have been due to medium acidity dependent activation of intra-bacterial urease in intact H pylori.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1773732PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/gut.52.7.933DOI Listing

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