Gastric ulceration and H. Pylori Flashcards

1
Q

What are risk factors for the development of gastric ulcers?

A
  • H. Pylori
  • NSAID use
  • Smoking
  • Reflux of duodenal contents
  • Delayed gastric emptying
  • Stress
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2
Q

What is the difference between an ulcer and an erosion?

A

A break in the mucosal lining of the stomach or duodenum more than 5 mm in diameter, with depth to the submucosa. Ulcers smaller than this or without obvious depth are called erosions.

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3
Q

How do peptic ulcers occur?

A

Result from an imbalance between factors promoting mucosal damage (gastric acid, pepsin, Helicobacter pylori infection, non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug use) and those mechanisms promoting gastroduodenal defense (prostaglandins, mucus, bicarbonate, mucosal blood flow).

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4
Q

What type of bacteria is H. Pylori?

A

Slow-growing spiral gram-negative bacteria

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5
Q

Where is h. pylori most commonly found?

A

Gastric antrum

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6
Q

How is H. Pylori protected from gastric acid?

A

By juxtamucosal mucous layer which traps bicarbonate secreted by antral cells, and ammonia produced by bacterial urease.

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7
Q

What enzyme does H. pylori possess which enables it to convert area to ammonium and chloride?

A

Urease

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8
Q

What results from infection with H. Pylori?

A
  • Antral gastritis
  • Peptic ulceration (duodenal and gastric)
  • Gastric cancer
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9
Q

What are features of gastric ulcers?

A

Can be asymptomatic, but can have:

  • Recurrent, burning epigastric pain - relieved by antacids
  • Nausea
  • Weight loss
  • Symptoms of anaemia
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10
Q

What are features of duodenal ulcers?

A

Can be asymptomatic, or:

  • Burning epigastric pain - relieved by antacids
  • Weight loss
  • Signs of anaemia
  • Epigastric tenderness
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11
Q

What are risk factors for the development of duodenal ulcers?

A
  • H. pylori
  • Drugs - NSAID’s, Steroids, SSRI’s
  • Increased gastric acid secretion
  • Increased gastric emptying
  • Smoking
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12
Q

Why does chronic antral gastritis cause increased gastric acid secretion?

A

Causes hypergastrinaemia due to gastrin release from antral G cells

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13
Q

What might back pain in someone with dyspeptic symtpoms, weight loss and anaemia suggest?

A

Penetration of a posterior ulcer

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14
Q

What investigations would you consider going in someone with suspected peptic ulcers?

A
  • Blood tests - FBC, H. pylori serology, fasting gastrin levels
  • Urea breath test
  • H. Pylori stool antigen test
  • Upper GI endoscopy
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15
Q

What is involved in the urea breath test for investigating H. Pylori?

A

Give the patient <span>13</span>C or 14C labelled urea -> Measurement of 13CO2 in the breath after ingestion (requires mass spectrometer). The test is sensitive (90%) and specific (96%)

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16
Q

What is important to tell people to do before performing Urea breath test?

A
  • Stop antibiotics for 4 weeks prior
  • Stop PPIs 2 weeks prior
17
Q

What staining is used on biopsy samples for investigating for H. pylori?

A

Giemsa staining

18
Q

How would you manage someone with confirmed H. Pylori?

A

Eradication Therapy - Triple therapy for 7 days

  • Clarithromycin 500mg bd
  • Amoxycillin 1g bd (or Metronidazole 400mg bd)
    • Tetracycline is given if penicillin allergy
  • PPI: e.g. omeprazole 20mg bd
19
Q

If someone was found to be negative for H. pylori as the cause of their peptic ulcer, how would you manage them?

A

Acid suppression alone

20
Q

What would be your differential diagnosis for someone with features of peptic ulceration?

A
  • Non-ulcer-dyspepsia
  • Duodenal crohn’s
  • TB
  • Lymphoma
  • Pancreatic cancer
21
Q

What is important to exclude on endoscopy in someone with suspected peptic ulcer disease in older patients?

A

Gastric cancer

22
Q

What are alarm symptoms of someone with gastritis?

A
  • Anaemia
  • Loss of weight
  • Anorexia
  • Recent onset
  • Malaena/haematemesis
  • Swallowing difficulty
23
Q

What are complications of peptic ulceration?

A
  • Haemorrhage
  • Perforation
  • Gastric outlet obstruction/Pyloric stenosis
24
Q

What are features of gastric outlet obstruction?

A
  • Vomiting - infrequent, projectile, large in volume, contains particles of previous meals.
  • Succussion splash
25
Q

When is surgery considered as an option in peptic ulceration?

A
  • Recurrent uncontrolled haemorrhage
  • Perforation
26
Q

What neoplastic disorders can occur due to H. Pylori infection?

A
  • Gastric adenocarcinoma
  • Gastric B cell lymphoma (MALT)
27
Q

What might you consider giving someone with NSAID associated ulcers which were refractory to PPI administration?

A

Misoprostol

28
Q

What tests could you perform on histological samples taken from the stomach to look for H. Pylori?

A
  • Rapid urease test
  • Histology
  • Culture
29
Q

What is Zollinger-Ellison syndrome?

A

Syndrome caused by gastrin-secreting tumour or hyperplasia of the islet cells in the pancreas causes overproduction of gastric acid, resulting in recurrent peptic ulcers.