The aim of this study was to evaluate in clinical specimens the immunological rapid urease test (IRUT), a new diagnostic system for detection of Helicobacter pylori which employs a monoclonal antibody against Helicobacter pylori urease. Helicobacter pylori urease adsorbed on a solid-phase tip coated with a monoclonal antibody against Helicobacter pylori urease after 15 min of incubation with a gastric mucus sample solution was measured by the pH change of the urea solution inside the tip. The detection limit of Helicobacter pylori urease using this system was determined and compared with that of a commercially available rapid urease test. Clinical evaluation of the system was performed in 155 patients. The IRUT could detect 0.25 milli-international units (mIU) of Helicobacter pylori urease per milliliter in less than 20 min. If a patient with at least one positive result in a standard test for Helicobacter pylori was considered to be Helicobacter pylori positive, the sensitivity, specificity, positive and negative predictive values of the system were calculated as 95.2%, 98.9%, 98.4% and 96.8%, respectively. However, 10 of 19 Helicobacter pylori-positive patients in whom the pH change was less than 0.1 had negative results in at least one of the standard tests, whereas the IRUT correctly detected Helicobacter pylori in all but 3 of these 19 patients. The IRUT accurately determined the Helicobacter pylori status of 75 (98.7%) of 76 patients who had completed treatment. This system has high sensitivity for the detection of Helicobacter pylori, especially in patients with low urease activity.
We report a living patient with multiple hepatic peribiliary cysts. It was discovered incidentally during an ultrasonographic screening at a medical examination. Peribiliary cysts are multiple retention cysts of peribiliary glands. Although many autopsy cases of peribiliary cysts have been reported, there are few clinical cases of it in living patients. A CT performed immediately after drip-infusion cholangiography (DIC) was most useful for diagnosis in various imaging tests we performed.
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