1. Usefulness of serum pepsinogens in Helicobacter pylori chronic gastritis: relationship with inflammation, activity, and density of the bacterium.
- Author
-
Di Mario F, Cavallaro LG, Moussa AM, Caruana P, Merli R, Maini A, Bertolini S, Dal Bó N, Rugge M, Cavestro GM, Aragona G, Plebani M, Franzé A, and Nervi G
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Case-Control Studies, Chronic Disease, Female, Gastritis pathology, Helicobacter Infections pathology, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Severity of Illness Index, Gastritis blood, Gastritis microbiology, Helicobacter Infections blood, Helicobacter pylori, Pepsinogen A blood, Pepsinogen C blood
- Abstract
We sought to study the relationship between serum pepsinogens and different histopathologic features of Helicobacter pylori-related chronic gastritis. One hundred forty-nine consecutive dyspeptic patients underwent endoscopy with biopsies; serum pepsinogens I and II were measured by immunoassay. Serum levels of pepsinogens (sPG) were significantly correlated with H. pylori density both of the corpus (sPGI: r = 0.32, P < .001; sPGII: r = 0.56, P < .001) and antrum (sPGI: r = 0.41, P < .001; sPGII: r = 0.43, P < .001) as well as with chronic inflammation (sPGI: r = 0.26, P < .001; sPGII: r = 0.49, P < .001) and activity (sPGI: r = 0.38, P < .001; sPGII: r = 0.50, P < .001) in the antrum. Only sPGII was correlated with chronic inflammation (r = 0.44, P < .001) and activity (r = 0.40, P < .001) in the corpus. SPGI was inversely correlated with atrophy (r = -0.33, P < .001) and intestinal metaplasia (r = -0.37, P < .001) in the corpus. sPGII levels could be considered as markers of gastric inflammation all over in the stomach. sPGI levels are inversely related to atrophic body gastritis.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF