SummaryThe prevalence of antimicrobial resistance is now such that all patients should be considered as having resistant infections. Ideally therapy is based on pretreatment susceptibility testing. Empiric therapies should assume antimicrobial resistance and use higher doses for 14 days. Acceptable results are 90-94% cure intention to treat (Grade B) or greater. Clarithromycin-containing triple therapies now typically produce ≤80% cure ITT (Grade F) and are no longer acceptable empiric therapy. Current initial therapy options are between sequential therapy, concomitant therapy, and bismuth containing quadruple therapy. Sequential therapy has the potential to be improved to ≥95% cure ITT (Grade A) by continuing the amoxicillin through the second and/or by increasing the duration. Better appreciation of the role of acidity in phenotypic resistance has resulted in high cure rates with high dose PPI plus amoxicillin dual therapy; additional studies to devise better dual-based multidrug regimes are still needed. Antimicrobial choices following treatment failure is best approached by susceptibility testing. If not available, we recommended a bismuth containing quadruple therapy substituting a new drug for metronidazole/tinidazole and/or clarithromycin if they have been used previously. The alternate would be to use a 14 day high dose PPI, amoxicillin-based triple therapy with rifabutin, a fluoroquinolone, or furazolidone. KeywordsHelicobacter pylori; therapy; resistance; antibiotics; anti-secretory drugs; phenotypic drug resistance; cytochrome P450 "To read without reflecting is like eating without digesting". -86-462-1111-86-462- , FAX 81-86-464-1195 Review criteria: We searched the relevant papers by using computer-assisted bibliographic searches of PubMed through November 30, 2007 using combinations of the following terms: H. pylori combined with resistance, therapy, eradication, second, triple, quadruple, sequential, or rescue. We also reviewed the recent literature on pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics in relation to the drugs used in H. pylori therapy and the relation to host cytochrome P450 genotypes to treatment outcome. We did not perform meta-analyses. We reviewed only articles published in English.
Acotiamide significantly enhances GAR and GER in FD patients. Acotiamide may have therapeutic potential for FD patients.
. Dual effects of acupuncture on gastric motility in conscious rats. Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol 285: R862-R872, 2003; 10.1152/ ajpregu.00715.2002The effects of manual acupuncture on gastric motility were investigated in 35 conscious rats implanted with a strain gauge transducer. Twenty (57.1%) rats showed no cyclic groupings of strong contractions (type A), whereas 15 (42.9%) rats showed the phase III-like contractions of the migrating motor complex (type B) in the fasting gastric motility. Acupuncture at the stomach (ST)-36 (Zusanli), but not on the back [Weishu, bladder (BL)-21], increased the peak amplitude of contractions to 172.4 Ϯ 25.6% of basal in the type A rats (n ϭ 20, P Ͻ 0.05). On the other hand, the motility index for 60 min after the acupuncture was not affected by the acupuncture in this group. On the contrary, acupuncture decreased the peak amplitude and motility index to 72.9 Ϯ 14.0% and 73.6 Ϯ 16.2% in the type B rats (n ϭ 15, P Ͻ 0.05), respectively. The stimulatory and inhibitory effects of acupuncture observed in each type were reproducible on the separate days. In 70% of type A rats, acupuncture induced strong phase III-like contractions lasting for over 3 h that were abolished by atropine, hexamethonium, atropine methyl bromide, and vagotomy. Naloxone significantly shortened the duration of the stimulatory effects from 3.52 Ϯ 0.21 to 1.02 Ϯ 0.15 h (n ϭ 3, P Ͻ 0.05). These results suggest that acupuncture at ST-36 induces dual effects, either stimulatory or inhibitory, on gastric motility. The stimulatory effects are mediated in part via vagal efferent and opioid pathways. vagal nerve; migrating motor complex; stomach-36; opioid ACUPUNCTURE HAS BEEN USED empirically in clinical practice in China for several millennia (59). In November 1997, the National Institutes of Health conducted a consensus conference regarding acupuncture and concluded that acupuncture is an effective treatment for several medical conditions. Although a large number of previous clinical studies support the efficacy of acupuncture for treating gastrointestinal (GI) symptoms and/or diseases (9, 16), little is known about the underlying mechanism(s).It has been demonstrated that the somatosensory inputs from the skin and/or muscle are involved in the control of various autonomic functions (22,26). A series of investigations regarding somato-autonomic reflexes has also been carried out focusing on GI function. In some of those investigations, there is good evidence indicating the importance of cutaneo-sensory inputs in the autonomic control of GI motility. In anesthetized rats, for instance, it has been shown that the cutaneogastric reflexes mediate the inhibition and the stimulation of gastric motility via sympathetic and parasympathetic efferents, respectively (24,28,47). It was shown that the cutaneo-sensory stimulation induced by pinching abdominal skin of rats inhibits gastric motility by increasing sympathetic activity. On the other hand, cutaneo-sensory stimulation induced by pinching the hindlimb enh...
PURPOSE This study aimed to compare patients with early oral cavity squamous cell carcinoma (OCSCC) (tumor category [T] 1-2, node-negative, and no distant metastasis) treated with traditional elective neck dissection (ND) with those managed by sentinel lymph node biopsy (SLNB) using survival and neck function and complications as end points. METHODS Sixteen institutions in Japan participated in the study (trial registration number: UMIN000006510). Patients of age ≥ 18 years with histologically confirmed, previously untreated OCSCC (Union for International Cancer Control TNM Classification of Malignant Tumors 7th edition T1-2, node-negative no distant metastasis), with ≥ 4 mm (T1) depth of invasion, were randomly assigned to undergo standard selective ND (ND group; n = 137) or SLNB-navigated ND (SLNB group; n = 134). The primary end point was the 3-year overall survival rate, with a 12% noninferiority margin; secondary end points included postoperative neck functionality and complications and 3-year disease-free survival. Sentinel lymph nodes underwent intraoperative multislice frozen section analyses for the diagnosis. Patients with positive sentinel lymph nodes underwent either one-stage or second-look ND. RESULTS Pathologic metastasis-positive nodes were observed in 24.8% (34 of 137) and 33.6% (46 of 134) of patients in the ND and SLNB groups, respectively ( P = .190). The 3-year overall survival in the SLNB group (87.9%; lower limit of one-sided 95% CI, 82.4) was noninferior to that in the ND group (86.6%; lower limit 95% CI, 80.9; P for noninferiority < .001). The 3-year disease-free survival rate was 78.7% (lower limit 95% CI, 72.1) and 81.3% (75.0) in the SLNB and ND groups, respectively ( P for noninferiority < .001). The scores of neck functionality in the SLNB group were significantly better than those in the ND group. CONCLUSION SLNB-navigated ND may replace elective ND without a survival disadvantage and reduce postoperative neck disability in patients with early-stage OCSCC.
There has been a progressive and rapid decline in the prevalence of H. pylori infection as well a fall in the rate of progression of gastric atrophy among H. pylori-infected Japanese coincident with the westernization and improvements in economic and hygienic conditions in Japan since World War II.
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