Gastritis Flashcards
Description: What is gastritis?
Inflammation of the gastric mucosa (can be chronic or acute)
Aetiology: What are the causes of gastritis (3)
- Autoimmune (parietal cells)
- Bacteria (H.pylori) = MOST COMMON
- Chemical (NSAIDs/Bile/Alcohol)
Pathology: Describe the pathology of autoimmune gastritis
Autoantibodies destroy/to
- Parietal cells (which leads to decreased acid secretion)
- Intrinsic factor (which leads to vitamin B12 deficiency)
Symptoms: What are the symptoms of gastritis? (not in the lecture)
- Epigastric pain
- Vomiting
THE SIGNS WERE NOT IN THE LECTURE
THE SIGNS WERE NOT IN THE LECTURE
Investigations: What investigations do we do for gastritis:
(a) Non-invasive tests
(b) Invasive tests
(a) Non-invasive:
- Stool antigen test (ELISA) – you need to be off protein pump inhibitors for 2 weeks
- 13C/14C urea breath test
- Serology (IgG against H.pylori)
(b) Invasive:
Requires endoscopy:
- Histology
- Culture
- Rapid slide urease test (CLO)
THE TREATMENT WAS NOT IN THE LECTURE but
answer it anyway
- H.pylori eradication – triple therapy
THE COMPLICATIONS WERE NOT IN THE LECTURE
THE COMPLICATIONS WERE NOT IN THE LECTURE
Extra: State 4 characteristics about H.pylori
- Gram negative (bacillus)
- Flagellated
- Spiral-shaped
- Microaerophilic
Extra: Where does H.pylori colonise and reside?
Colonises gastic type mucosa. Does not penetrate the epithelial layer