The importance of the Helicobacter pylori infection was investigated as a risk factor for several gastrointestinal diseases. In this study 203 patients with gastric cancer, 61 with peptic ulcus, 60 with gastritis and 100 asymptomatic control subjects were investigated. Serum samples were examined for IgC antibodies to H. pylori by enzyme linked immunoassay - tissue samples were stained for H. pylori by Wartin-Stary technique and by Giemsa for routine histopathology. H. pylori seropositivity was 58.1% in gastric cancer, 54% in peptic ulcus, 63.3% in gastritis and 27% in asymptomatic control group. There was a 10.1% discordance between the serum and tumor determinants in the seropositive group and 11.3% of discordance in the seronegative group. The frequency of H. pylori seropositivity was lowest in cardia tumors (22.7%) and highest in antral tumors (65.5%, p=0.00002). H. pylori seropositivity was 29% in diffuse type of histology, 35% in mixed type and 79% in the intestinal type (p=0.00000). In the gastric cancer patients the frequent use of salty food (p=0.00001, OR=6.4), excessive salt, pickled food (p=0.0000, OR=24.92) and proteins (p=0.003, OR=0.45) were more significant than asymptomatic volunteers. In gastric cancer patients the frequent use of salty and pickled food were relevantly associated with H. pylori infection (p=0.001). It was concluded that H. pylori infection could play a role in the pathogenesis of non-malignant gastrointestinal diseases which may be the precursor of carcinoma. However, other contributing factors to carcinogenesis must be investigated.

Download full-text PDF

Source

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

pylori infection
16
gastric cancer
16
gastrointestinal diseases
12
pylori seropositivity
12
pylori
9
helicobacter pylori
8
non-malignant gastrointestinal
8
peptic ulcus
8
asymptomatic control
8
cancer patients
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!