Peptic Ulcer Disease and Gastritis Flashcards
Define peptic ulcer disease
Ulceration of the gastric or duodenal mucosa resulting from the imbalance between factors
promoting mucosal damage (gastric acid, pepsin, H. pylori, NSAIDs) and factors protecting
the mucosa (prostaglandins, mucus, bicarbonate, mucosal blood flow).
Define gastritis
A histological diagnosis of inflammation of the gastric mucosa
What are the causes/risk factors of peptic ulcer disease?
Causes: • H. pylori infection (95% duodenal ulcers; 70-80% gastric ulcers) • NSAID use (gastric ulcers) • Zollinger-Ellison syndrome (gastric acid neuroendocrine tumour) • Crohn’s disease
Risk factors: • H. pylori infection • NSAID use • Smoking • Age • Family history
What are the causes/risk factors of gastritis?
Causes: • H. pylori infection (80%) • Autoimmune gastritis (5%) – atrophic gastritis and loss of parietal cells -> achlorhydria and pernicious anaemia
Risk factors: • H. pylori infection • NSAID use • Alcohol • Autoimmune disease
What are the symptoms of peptic ulcer disease and gastritis?
• Dyspepsia • Heartburn • Epigastric pain - Pain on eating – ?gastric ulcer - Pain before eating (when hungry, at night) - ?duodenal ulcer
Symptoms of anaemia
• Fatigue
GI bleeding complications
• Melaena
• Haematemesis
What are the signs of peptic ulcer disease and gastritis?
• Epigastric tenderness
Signs of anaemia
• Koilonychia
• Conjunctival pallor
What investigations are carried out for peptic ulcer disease and gastritis?
Bloods
• FBC – if clinically anaemic or GI bleeding
• Amylase – exclude pancreatitis
• Clotting screen and cross-match if bleeding
• Secretin test – if Zollinger-Ellison syndrome suspected; IV secretin -> increase in
serum gastrin
• Serum B12, parietal cell antibodies, intrinsic factor antibodies – exclude autoimmune
gastritis/pernicious anaemia
Patients with no alarm features or <55 years: H. pylori tests • H. pylori breath test – bacteria break down radiolabelled urea -> ammonia + 13CO2 using urease enzyme • H. pylori stool antigen (CLO) test – reduced sensitivity in patients taking PPIs (stop PPIs 2-4 weeks before test) • H. pylori serology – detects IgG; less sensitive but may be useful in patients taking PPIs
Patients with alarm features or >55 years:
Endoscopy
• Four quadrant gastric biopsies to exclude malignancy
What is the management for peptic ulcer disease and gastritis?
Eradication therapy for 7 or 14days e.g. OCA
• Omeprazole 20mg BD
• Clarithromycin 500mg BD
• Amoxicillin 1g BD or Metronidazole 500mg BD
Acid suppression • PPI e.g. omeprazole • H2 antagonist e.g. ranitidine • Stop NSAIDs or use prostaglandin E1 analogue e.g. misoprostol if NSAIDs are necessary
Autoimmune gastritis
• IM cyanocobalamin (vitamin B12)
What are the complications of peptic ulcer disease and gastritis?
• Haemorrhage
- Haematemesis
- Melaena
- Iron deficiency anaemia
• Perforation
• Gastric outlet obstruction (due to oedema, scarring , malignancy, pancreatitis)
• Gastric carcinoma (risk is increased with untreated H. pylori gastritis)