The anatomofunctional status of the stomach was studied in cholera patients during the outbreak in Bari, Italy, in 1973. Of a total of 70 patients examined, 24 were found to have undergone gastric resection for ulcer in the past. Stomach secretions induced by fasting and histamine stimulation were studied in 30 patients, the majority of whom showed achlorhydria and other disturbances of gastric secretion. These abnormalities not only predisposed the patients to cholera infection but shortened the incubation period. The clinical course and severity of the disease were also related to the degree of gastric damage, the most serious cases occurring in gastrectomized patients.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2366304 | PMC |
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