幽门螺杆菌:超越消化性溃疡疾病。

The Gastroenterologist Pub Date : 1997-12-01
R M Wisniewski, D A Peura
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引用次数: 0

摘要

除了消化性溃疡疾病外,幽门螺杆菌感染还与肠型胃癌和低级别胃黏膜相关淋巴组织(MALT)淋巴瘤有关。它目前也被认为是消化不良和肠外疾病(如冠状动脉疾病、酒渣鼻、慢性荨麻疹和儿童生长迟缓)的可能原因。有来自大型队列研究的强有力的流行病学数据将幽门螺杆菌与胃腺癌联系起来。一些辅助因素,包括儿童早期感染获得性、菌株特异性差异、宿主遗传易感性和环境,似乎在慢性胃炎向胃癌的进展中起作用。超过90%的MALT淋巴瘤可见幽门螺杆菌感染,大约70%的局部非体积肿瘤在根除细菌后会发生完全的组织学消退。由于随访数据限制在2年以内,将根除幽门螺杆菌作为MALT淋巴瘤的主要治疗方法的患者需要经常进行肿瘤复发的组织学监测。关于根除幽门螺杆菌对消化不良症状的影响,短期研究中有相互矛盾的数据。消化不良患者是否进行幽门螺杆菌检测的决定,在有较长随访期的对照良好的研究时可能会变得更容易。由于幽门螺杆菌引起全身炎症反应,研究人员开始探索可能与幽门螺杆菌感染相关的肠外疾病。消化性溃疡和胃癌的全球流行使得研究重点放在高危人群的无创幽门螺杆菌筛查和通过疫苗接种预防原发性感染上。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Helicobacter pylori: beyond peptic ulcer disease.

Beyond peptic ulcer disease, Helicobacter pylori infection is associated with intestinal-type gastric cancer and low-grade gastric mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue (MALT) lymphoma. It is also currently implicated as a possible cause of dyspepsia and extraintestinal disorders such as coronary artery disease, rosacea, chronic urticaria, and delayed growth in children. There are strong epidemiological data from large cohort studies linking H. pylori to gastric adenocarcinoma. Several cofactors, including early childhood acquisition of infection, strain-specific differences, genetic predisposition of the host, and the environment, appear to play a role in the progression of chronic gastritis to gastric cancer. H. pylori infection is seen in over 90% of MALT lymphomas, and about 70% of localized nonbulky tumors will undergo complete histological regression after eradication of the bacterium. Because follow-up data are limited to less than 2 years, those undergoing H. pylori eradication as primary therapy for MALT lymphoma require frequent histological surveillance for tumor recurrence. There are conflicting data from short-term studies regarding the effect of H. pylori eradication on dyspeptic symptoms. The decision to test or not for H. pylori in the dyspeptic patient may become easier when well-controlled studies with longer periods of follow-up become available. Because H. pylori induces a systemic inflammatory response, investigators are beginning to explore possible extraintestinal disease associations with the infection. The global prevalence of both peptic ulcer disease and gastric cancer has led to studies focusing on noninvasive screening for H. pylori in high-risk populations and prevention of primary infection by means of vaccination.

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