IntroductionDyspepsia is a common symptom with an extensive differential diagnosis. Endoscopy alone may miss serious mucosal lesions in about 15 to 30% of cases. The aim was to determine histopathological features of gastric and duodenal mucosal biopsies in patients with dyspepsia and normal looking upper gastrointestinal (GI) endoscopy.Materials and methodsOne hundred and five adult patients presenting with dyspepsia with no endoscopic mucosal lesions in the upper GI tract were included. Gastric biopsy specimens according to Sydney–Houston system for grading gastritis and biopsy from duodenum were taken. The histopathological features were graded according to the Sydney–Houston system classification for grading gastritis.ResultsThe histological lesions were found in 65.7% (69 out of 105 endoscopy free dyspeptic patients). Chronic inflammation was the commonest finding. Neutrophilic activity, glandular atrophy, and mild degree of intestinal metaplasia were present in 27, 45, and 6 patients (22.8, 42.8, and 5.7% respectively). Helicobacter pylori was present in 54 patients with histopathological lesions and in 6 patients without histopathological lesions, and the difference was significant (p = 0.045).ConclusionThe endoscopic diagnosis of dyspepsia correlated poorly with histopathological findings. The histopathological examination allowed detection and grading of gastric pathology in dyspepsia with normal endoscopy and the commonest finding was the moderate chronic gastritis.How to cite this articleDawod HM, Emara MW. Histopathological Assessment of Dyspepsia in the Absence of Endoscopic Mucosal Lesions. Euroasian J Hepato-Gastroenterol 2016;6(2):97-102.
Background and study aim: Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) accounts for 70-80% of all liver cancers and the 5-year survival is only 3-5%. This bad prognosis is due to the lack of an effective method for early diagnosis. So, only 30-40% of patients with HCC are suitable for curative treatments at the time of diagnosis. Thus, there is a great need for tools to diagnose HCC early especially in cirrhotic patients. The aim of this work is to assess the validity of serum DKK1 as a diagnostic marker for HCC and to assess prognostic value of serum DKK1 in predicting treatment response, complication and survival in HCC patients. Patients and Methods: This study included 60 Patients divided into two groups. Group A: consisted of 30 patients with post hepatitic C and/or B liver cirrhosis. Group B: consisted of 30 patients with HCC on top of post hepatitic C and/or B liver cirrhosis. Group B patients underwent either radiofrequency ablation or ethanol injection. Clinical assessment, routine laboratory evaluation, CT studies and measurement of serum alpha-fetoprotein (AFP) and DKK1 were performed to all patients and repeated to group B patients 1 and 3 months after treatment. Results: The optimum cut off value of DKK1 for diagnosis of HCC was 4.3 ng/mL (AUC 0.89, sensitivity 66.7% and specificity 96.6%) (P<0.001). While, the optimum cut off value for AFP was > 101 ng/mL with 90% sensitivity and 75.9% specificity (p<0.001). Testing of both DKK1 and AFP increased the diagnostic accuracy for HCC (AUC 0.901, sensitivity 93.3%, and specificity 75.9) (P<0.001). Serum DKK1 level significantly decreases after HCC treatment with either radiofrequency ablation or ethanol injection (P<0.001). Conclusion: Testing of both DKK1 and AFP significantly increased the diagnostic accuracy for HCC. Meanwhile, DKK1 can be used alone for HCC diagnosis even in HCC with inconclusive AFP. DKK1 has a promising prognostic value and can be used for follow up of HCC patients who underwent loco-regional treatment.
Background and aim of the work: COVID-19 has multiple challenges among risky cases like rheumatoid arthritis patients. So, this study was done to look for COVID-19 in patients with rheumatoid arthritis and compare the severity and outcome of COVID-19 in rheumatoid arthritis patients to those in other groups. Patients and Methods: the prospective comparative study included 146 randomly selected patients attending Zagazig University Hospital in Egypt ,who were treated by the Egyptian Ministry of Health and Population protocol for COVID-19, and the disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs (DMARDs)who fulfilled the selection criteria to be recruited into three groups: rheumatoid arthritis (RA) patients; rheumatoid arthritis with COVID-19 patients (RA-COVID); and a COVID-19 (COVID-19) group. Results: the mean age of the studied group was 50 years old. The three studied groups showed no statistically significant difference (p > 0.05) as regards age, sex, level of education, and marital status. But there was a statistically significant difference between groups regarding occupation and special habits in the form of hashish smoking. There was no marked difference in COVID-19 symptoms between group II and group III. The mean of the Modified Health Assessment Questionnaire (MHAQ) was 5.5 in RA group versus 8 in RA-COVID-19 group ,with statistically significant difference between group I and II as regard DAS28. The duration from being diagnosed with COVID-19 till recovery was significantly higher in RA-COVID-19 cases compared to COVID-19. RA-COVI-19 group did tend toward higher hospital admission rates (OR 0.81; 95% CI 0.35-0.88; p = 0.03). Conclusion: COVID-19 is accompanied by non-significant worsening of symptoms in RA patients on DMARDs, except the admission rates. More research into expanding cases is required .
New therapeutic choices have been developed for hepatocellular carcinoma, including percutaneous ablation therapy, transarterial chemoembolization, radiation therapy and molecular target therapy. Ablation of liver tumors is currently the main alternative to liver resection. This work aimed at comparing percutaneous combined local injection of ethanol and mitoxantrone versus percutaneous radiofrequency ablation in the treatment of Hepatocellular Carcinoma. This study included 124 patients with hepatocellular carcinoma, they were randomly divided into two groups; group I (64 patients) treated with local injection of ethanol plus mitoxantrone. Group II (60 patients) treated with radiofrequency ablation. Clinical assessment, laboratory evaluation and CT studies were performed to all patients prior to treatment and at 1, 3, 6, and 12 months' post treatment. The percentage of ablation in both groups at 1, 3, 6 and 12 months were 81.3%, 81.3%,76.6 and 71.9% in group I respectively versus 88.3%, 88.3, 85%% and 81.7% in group II respectively with no statistical significant difference between the two groups. Percentage of ablation in small tumors is higher than large tumors in both groups. Side effects and complications are statistically higher in group II than group I. Combination of percutaneous local injection of ethanol and mitoxantrone is comparable to radiofrequency ablation with less frequent complications in the treatment of Hepatocellular Carcinoma when surgical resection or liver transplantation is not amenable or available.
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