Gastritis can be defined as histological inflammation of the gastric mucosa. It can be classified according to the time course of the disease as acute or chronic, histological findings, anatomic location, and pathological mechanisms. The objective of this study was to evaluation of serum levels of the proinflammatory cytokines IL-8, IL-17 and IL-22 in Helicobacter pylori infection and their association with the degree of gastritis histopathology in a sample of Iraqi patients. The case-control prospective study consists of 60 patients who attended the Gastrointestinal Tract Center at Al-Kindy Teaching Hospital during the period from December 2019 to April 2020. In addition, the control group included 60 apparently healthy individuals. Biopsies from the gastric antrum and/or body mucosa were used to assess the severity of chronic inflammation, neutrophil infiltration, atrophy, intestinal metaplasia. Serum samples were obtained to determine H. pylori infection, circulating interleukin (IL)-8, IL-17, and IL-22. Results showed that the Patients’ ages with gastritis ranged from 18-75 years. The body mass index revealed that 33.33% of the patients were obese and 35% of them were overweight. Most of the patients with active chronic gastritis and superficial chronic gastritis had positive titers for anti-H. pylori IgG antibody (167.89 ± 3.18 IU/ml) and (150.74± 1.45 IU/ml) respectively, which was significantly different from the control group (4.36 ± 0.29 IU/ml) (P=0.0001). Histopathological analysis showed that all subjects experienced chronic inflammation, while neutrophil infiltration was found 36.66% and there was significant association between serum levels of IL-8, IL-17, and IL-22 with a degree of chronic inflammation and neutrophils infiltration. In conclusion, the most common cause of gastritis was H. pylori with histopathological lesions, showing neutrophils infiltration and chronic gastric mucosal inflammation associated with increased levels of IL-8, IL-17, and IL-22 in serum.
Specialized class of short tandem repeats located on human Y (male) chromosomes called Y-chromosome short tandem repeats (Y-STRs) are transferred from one generation to the next with unchanged (barring a mutation). Also, these loci have high discriminatory capacities among individuals of the same population or ethnicity due to the non-recombining nature of it. Peripheral blood sample from 160 unrelated Iraqi males in Baghdad are collected and DNA was extracted from it. Amplification of 23 Y-STR markers (DYS576, DYS3891, DYS448, DYS389II ,DYS19, DYS481, DYS549, DYS533, DYS438, DYS437, DYS570, DYS635, DYS390, DYS439, DYS392, DYS643, DYS393, DYS458a/b, DYS456 and YGATAH4) was performed using PowerPlex Y 23 System (Promega Corporation), PCR amplicons were analyzed on 4-capillary ABI Prism® 3100 Genetic Analyzer. Collected data were analyzed and haplotypes were obtained using Gene Mapper ID-X software version 1.4 (Applied Biosystems). Results indicated that the most polymorphic loci were DYS385a/b with 43 alleles and The GD value was 0.929, while 4 alleles at the DYS576 and DYS391, with the genetic diversity of 0.459 and 0.480 respectively. At the loci DYS570 and DYS458 the allele frequency were 10 and 12 alleles with a genetic diversity 0.780 and 0.844 respectively. Gene diversity values for the South of Iraq males ranged from 0.447 to 0.844. The highest GD was detected at DYS458loci with a value of 0.856 and the lowest GD at DYS448 locus with a value of 0.447, 143 Haplotype was identified, 130 (81, 25%) as a unique Haplotype and 13 (18, 75%) as replicated haplotype among individuals. The highest haplotype were found in sample H19, H43, H72 and H122 at frequency 0.01875, While 130 haplotype with 0.00625 frequency and haplotype diversity was 0.99835 with a discrimination capacity 0.91. The study revealed that the loci under study and the used kit are suitable for use in identification, discrimination and forensic applications in the Iraqi population.
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