View clinical trials related to Gastritis, Atrophic.
Filter by:The goal of this observational study is to evaluate the risk factors associated with incident HGD/GA in patients with CAG with or without IM who are enrolled in endoscopic surveillance, as well as to compare GA incidence according to the OLGA and OLGIM scales in patients 18 years or older. . The main questions it aims to answer are: - What risk factors are associated with incident HGD/GA in patients with CAG with or without IM? - What is the comparative HGD/GA incidence according to the OLGA and OLGIM scales?
Treatment of H.pylori may not be achieved in many patients with chronic gastritis. Termination of the inflammatory respose produced by h.pylori may be useful in management of difficult cases. Heparanase is a pro-inflammatory mediator. Blocking of heparanase may relief the symptoms of chronic gastritis.
As we know,Helicobacter pylori is closely related to many gastrointestinal diseases such as chronic gastritis, peptic ulcer disease,gastric carcinoma and gastric mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue lymphoma,as well as extra-digestive diseases such as urticaria and chronic obstructive pulmonary diseases and so on.The diagnosis of H. pylori infection is based on invasive methods requiring endoscopy and biopsy(e.g. histology, culture, rapid urease test, PCR) or on non-invasive methods (e.g. serology, 13C urea breath test, stool antigen test).Histology has the highest specificity among the others,and also allows us to determine the underlying disease and perform antibiotic sensitivity testing.Serological tests are widely available and more appropriate for epidemiological studies, their main weakness for clinical use is low specificity.The 13C urea breath test is the most accurate method in patients irrespective of age.Stool antigen testing,as a promising method, is easy to perform, and its accuracy may be improved by the use of monoclonal antibodies recently proposed for capturing H. pylori antigen in stool specimen.Sensitivity and specificity, usefulness,and limitation of tests should be considered for selection of detection methods of H. pylori. Our objective is to review the current methods that are used for the detection of H. pylori infection among patients with chronic atrophic gastritis.Except that,patients with Hp positive will be further treated with 10-day minocycline-based quadruple therapy,to observe the efficacy and safety of minocycline-based regimen for H.pylori eradication as a first-line therapy.
The purpose of study is to confirm the efficacy of DWP14012 X mg QD, DWP14012 Y mg BID compared to placebo in patients with Acute or Chronic Gastritis
Gastric cancer is the third most common cause of cancer-related death worldwide (1). Upper endoscopy is necessary to detect neoplastic macroscopic features at an early stage, but subtle abnormalities in the gastric mucosa are often missed or misdiagnosed (1). Helicobacter pylori (Hp) is involved in the pathogenesis of gastric diseases, such as, peptic ulcers, gastric lymphoma, and gastric cancer. Therefore, the necessity to recognize malignant gastric lesions at an early stage is imperative.
To validate OLGA and OLGIM staging system with serum pepsinogen for estimating GC risk according to Lauren's histologic classification in South Korea. Also attempted to estimate synergistic interaction among the several risk factors to help establish surveillance strategy.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate efficacy of Chinese medicine treatment for chronic atrophic gastritis. It is a multi-center, randomized, placebo-controlled trial.
H. pylori infection plays a very important role in gastric carcinogenesis, progressing from chronic gastritis through atrophic gastritis, intestinal metaplasia, dysplasia and finally cancer. It is difficult to diagnose H. pylori related gastritis and gastric atrophy on the basis of endoscopic findings. Histology is currently considered to be the gold standard for detecting H. pylori infection. The reliability of detecting H. pylori infection histologically depends on the site, number, and size of gastric biopsy specimens. The blind biopsy sampling of normal appearing mucosa has the risk of missing pathology and sampling errors. Most studies conclude that as well as on expertise in staining and visualizing the bacteria. Considerable error also occurs in identifying gastric atrophy using blind biopsy sampling, and neither the original nor the revised version of the Sydney system reliably identifies more than half the cases in patients with confirmed gastric atrophy.
H. pylori positive patient volunteers that passed the selection criteria are recruited and divided into a test and a control group. Both groups are treated with a current treatment regime (EAC: Esomeprazole 40 mg/day; Clarithromycin 1000 mg/day; Amoxicillin 2000 mg/day) but only the test group received IgY-containing food supplement as an adjunctive measure for 15 days. The subjects are examined before and 4 weeks after the treatment initiation by Urea Breath Test (UBT) and gastro-endoscopy.
Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) infection has been associated with a development of atrophic gastritis and intestinal metaplasia. H. pylori related atrophic gastritis and intestinal metaplasia have been regarded as pre-malignant lesion. However, the role of H. pylori eradication treatment in the reversibility of atrophic gastritis and intestinal metaplasia has not been clearly defined. The aim of the present study was to investigate the relationship between H. pylori eradication and the reversibility of atrophic gastritis and intestinal metaplasia in Korean patients.