infection over bile reflux: No influence on the severity of endoscopic or premalignant gastric lesion development.

Exp Ther Med

Department of Clinical Science-Internal Medicine, 'George Emil Palade' University of Medicine, Pharmacy, Science, and Technology, 540139 Târgu Mureș, Romania.

Published: July 2021

infection and duodenogastric reflux (DGR) are both linked to endoscopic and premalignant gastric lesion development, but it is still unclear whether they are independent or have a causal relationship. This study investigated the histologic gastric changes in patients with primary DGR and infection, as well as their endoscopic findings, symptoms, drug consumption, and social behavior in comparison with patients presenting only DGR. The study included 560 patients with primary DGR on endoscopy divided into two groups, according to the presence/absence of infection on biopsy (utilizing usual stainings and immunohistochemical methods). There was no significant difference in terms of age and sex, nor in the frequency of diabetes or esophagitis between the studied groups. Epigastric pain was associated with -positive biopsies in multivariate logistic regression analysis (P=0.005). Although without statistical significance, severe endoscopic lesions and premalignant gastric lesions were more frequent in the group (45.1 vs. 28.4% and 37.4 vs. 32.3%, respectively). In patients with DGR, the final multivariate model revealed a positive association between smoking and immunohistochemically confirmed infection (P=0.02, OR=1.88, 95% confidence intervals (CI)=1.10 to 3.21), but a negative effect of proton pump inhibitor consumption (P<0.001, OR=0.50, 95% CI=0.35 to 0.73). In conclusion, in patients with infection and DGR, epigastric pain was the main reason for the endoscopic investigation. infection over DGR did not influence the severity of endoscopic or premalignant gastric lesion development. Furthermore, smoking is directly related to immunohistochemically assessed active infection in patients with bile reflux.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8145345PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3892/etm.2021.10198DOI Listing

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