This study describes the abnormal pattern of gastrointestinal progression of a liquid meal in patients with the digestive form of chronic Chagas' disease. This condition is known as a natural model of intramural denervation of the gut. Sixteen patients with clinical and radiographic evidence of esophageal and/or colonic involvement and 18 healthy volunteers were studied. Orocecal transit time after the ingestion of a 10% lactulose solution (180 ml) tagged with 99mtechnetium was measured by a conventional H2 breath technique. Gastric emptying and the arrival of the front of the meal to regions of interest corresponding to proximal and distal areas of the small intestine were assessed by abdominal scintigraphy. Orocecal transit time was significantly greater (P < 0.05) in Chagas' disease patients (N = 13) than in control subjects (N = 18) (mean +/- SD: 100.7 +/- 48.7 min vs 62.9 +/- 18.2 min). Half-time for gastric emptying of liquids in chagasic patients (N = 9) was significantly lower (P < 0.01) than in controls (N = 7) (9.7 +/- 2.7 min vs 26.4 +/- 3.4 min). The time of arrival of the liquid meal to the proximal small intestine was also significantly shorter (P < 0.02) in patients than in controls (5.6 +/- 3.7 vs 11.4 +/- 5.5 min), but there was no difference between the two groups concerning the time the meal first arrived to the distal small intestine (15.0 +/- 11.0 min vs 23.5 +/- 11.4 min, P > 0.05). These results indicate that patients with Chagas' disease have a combination of exceedingly rapid gastric emptying and abnormally delayed transit of liquids through the more distal segments of the small bowel.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Acute esophageal necrosis (AEN) is defined as a diffuse blackened aspect of the esophagus observed by upper gastrointestinal endoscopy associated with the histopathological findings of necrosis of the esophageal mucosa. In general, the condition is present in severely compromised patients. Its cause remains unknown but is probably multifactorial. In the present case report we describe the clinical, endoscopic and histopathological characteristics of black esophagus observed in three patients and present a review of the literature.
Patients with the digestive form of Chagas' disease frequently present chronic gastritis. As the microorganism Helicobacter pylori is now accepted as the most common cause of human chronic gastritis, the present work was undertaken to verify a possible relationship between the presence of this bacterium and inflammatory changes of antral mucosa in chagasic patients. Seventeen chagasics, with megaesophagus and or megacolon were studied. Fragments from two different regions of antral mucosa were obtained by endoscopy, fixed in 4% neutral formaldehyde and embedded in paraffin. The sections were stained by haematoxylin and eosin for histology analysis, and by carbolfuchsin for H. pylori identification. H. pylori was found in 16 (94.1%) chagasic patients, all of them presenting chronic gastritis. Superficial gastritis was seen in 9 (52.9%) while atrophic gastritis was present in 8 (47.1%) patients. H. pylori was present on gastric mucosa of 8 (100%) patients with atrophic gastritis and of 8 (88.8%) patients with superficial gastritis. We concluded that the microorganism H. pylori should be considered a possible factor connected with the etiopathogenesis of chronic superficial and atrophic gastritis frequently observed in patients with the digestive form of Chagas' disease.
The absence of the myenteric plexus seems to protect the stomach from the hyperplastic effects of hypergastrinemia. Gastric food stasis may act as a factor triggering morphological and functional alterations of the gastric epithelium. Although gastric food stasis is a common finding in medical practice, its physiopathological consequences are poorly understood and have not been frequently discussed in the literature.
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