View clinical trials related to Gastritis.
Filter by:Approximately 50% of people in the world are infected with H. pylori, and its eradication rate fail to exceed 80% and even fails into an unacceptable range.Various risk factors for infection include lower socioeconomic status, younger age, and geographic location.In the present study, investigators aimed to perform a prevalence survey about risk factors for H. pylori infection.To obtain the higher eradication of H. pylori and find out the relevance between the diverse infection and clinical drug focused on refractory H. pylori infection.
Helicobacter pylori is a common bacterial infection. It can lead to severe stomach problems, including stomach cancer. Researchers want to look at samples of the bacteria. These H. pylori strains will be taken from chronically infected people. They want to identify the genetic and epigenetic differences in H. pylori strains. This could help predict which people who get infected with the bacteria will get stomach cancer. This could lead to the cancer being detected earlier. It could also mean less people get stomach cancer. Objectives: To study genetic variations of H. pylori strains based on samples from chronically infected people. To identify the features of strains that might lead to severe stomach problems or stomach cancer. Eligibility: People ages 30-70 years who need an upper endoscopy or who were recently diagnosed with stomach cancer Design: Participants will be screened by the doctor who does their procedure and a study nurse. Participants who have endoscopy will have ~6 biopsies removed. These are tissue samples. They are about the size of a grain of rice. Participants will allow the study team to access reports from their stomach exam. Participants with stomach cancer will donate some of the tissue that will be removed during their clinical care. They will allow the study team to access reports of their surgery. They will also allow them to access the microscope slides of their stomach.
This randomized phase IIb trial studies how well curcumin works in preventing gastric cancer in patients with chronic atrophic gastritis and/or gastric intestinal metaplasia. Curcumin is an antioxidant compound found in plants that may stop the growth of tumor cells by blocking some of the enzymes needed for cell growth.
Recently studies showed that the eradication rate of H. pylori fail to exceed 80% and even falls into an unacceptable range. A major cause of treatment failure is associated with antibiotic resistance and poor patient compliance. However, the refractory infection of H. pylori is still existing, although patients have good compliance and receive standardized treatment. This phenomenon is likely attributed to the different ratio of sensitive and resistance in H. pylori, the difference of Amoxicillin resistance between in vivo and in vitro, the difference between phenotype and genotype or the influence of micro-environment in the stomach. In order to solve the refractory infection of H. pylori, investigators performed a muti-center study together with other 14 institutions. In this study, investigators will select the patients with refractory infection of H. pylori after two standardized treatment from patients with first eradication therapy of H. pylori infection. Then, investigators will perform a high-throughput sequencing for patients in groups. Finally, investigators will compare the differences between the patients with first successful eradication and patients with refractory infection of H. pylori, such as drug resistance gene mutation, phenotype and genotype, the mechanisms of Amoxicillin resistance and micro-environment in stomach.
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.
Since the discovery of Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori), many studies have been carried out with the goal of improving H. pylori eradication and therapies have changed from single-antibiotic treatments to the current multi-antibiotic treatments. However, the eradication rate of H. pylori is still less than 80%. The reasons for this low eradication rate are likely to be multi-factorial, including the reduced activity of antimicrobial drugs, poor patient compliance or micro-environment in stomach. In this study, to obtain the higher eradication of H. pylori and discover the different mechanism between the current infection and refractory infection of H. pylori, it is necessary to perform a prevalence survey for eradication of H. pylori based on the results from isolation of H. pylori strains, antibiotic susceptibility testing, CYP2C19 gene polymorphism, drug resistance gene sequencing and 16SrRNA sequencing.
The aim of this study is to show non-inferiority of two brands of simeticone in adult patients suffering from functional dyspepsia.
This study aims at evaluating efficacy and safety of berberine-containing quadruple therapy(berberine, lansoprazole, bismuth and amoxicillin) versus clarithromycin-containing quadruple therapy (clarithromycin,lansoprazole, bismuth and amoxicillin) in H. pylori eradication. It is hypothesized that berberine-containing quadruple therapy is non-inferior to clarithromycin-containing quadruple therapy. Patients with confirmed H. pylori positive status will be randomized to one of the treatments described above. At week 2 and 6 follow-up visits, a urea breath test(UBT) will be performed to confirm eradication.