Immediately after the Great Hanshin Earthquake in Kobe in 1995, the recurrence rate of peptic ulcer in patients infected with Helicobacter pylori was higher than that in patients in whom H. pylori had been eradicated. We evaluated the influence of H. pylori infection on stress-induced gastric mucosal injury in Mongolian gerbils and C57BL/6 mice. These animals were immersed in water for 30, 120, and 720 min 12 weeks after inoculation with H. pylori, and then killed to assess gastric mucosal damage, and to measure cytokine production (interleukin [IL]-1beta, IL-4, IL-6, and IL-10; interferon [IFN]-gamma; and tumor necrosis factor [TNF]-alpha) in the gastric tissue of the mice. The stress treatment for 30 min resulted in a significantly higher bleeding rate and bleeding index among infected gerbils and mice compared with results in uninfected animals. Conversely, the bleeding and ulcer indexes were significantly higher in uninfected gerbils after 720 min of the stress treatment than in infected gerbils. Prior to the stress treatment, gastric IL-1beta and IFN-gamma production was significantly higher in the infected group than in the uninfected group. After 120 min of the stress treatment, TNF-alpha production was increased in the infected group, and IL-1beta and IL-10 production was increased in the uninfected group. However, the production of these cytokines showed no change at 30 min of the stress treatment. These results suggest that H. pylori infection influences the development of gastric mucosal injury in the early phase of stress exposure; cytokines do not play a major role in this process.
We have established a Helicobacter pylori-infected Mongolian gerbil model following Hirayama's method to investigate gastric diseases associated with H. pylori infection. We orally administered the culture broth of H. pylori ATCC 43504 to 8-week-old male Mongolian gerbils. After this, the gerbils were fed in a vinyl isolator. Subsequently, over the course of 48 weeks some of them were sacrificed for histopathologic examination and H. pylori culture. H. pylori colonization in the glandular stomach was seen in all the infected gerbils but only a few H. pylori were detected histologically. Acute inflammation, immature epithelium, and erosion were observed 2 weeks after H. pylori infection. Chronic inflammation was noted from 4 weeks after H. pylori infection. In addition, we found intestinal metaplasia and gastric ulcers from 12 and 24 weeks, respectively. There was mild to moderate inflammation in the duodenum but no ulcerative lesions or gastric metaplasia were observed. Some histologic findings were similar to those in humans, but inflammation occurred mainly in the deep mucosa and submucosa. This is a good animal model for H. pylori-associated gastric diseases but not for duodenal ulcers or gastric metaplasia. It might be useful for investigating the pathogenesis of H. pylori infection in the stomach.
The patient, a 51-year-old man, was receiving immunosuppresants for 2 yr after renal allotransplantation. He had heart failure with aortic regurgitation, fever, anemia and a history of odontectomy on admission. He wasresistant to medical treatments and died from cerebral emboli. Onautopsy, vegetation of the aortic valve was identified. Progression of atherosclerosis, which may have been due to steroids and chronic rejection, was prominent. This report is the first case of infective endocarditis following organ transplantation in Japan. Such complications as infective endocarditis and atherosclerosis will be on the rise with the increase of numbers of organ transplantations.
Introduction Endoscopic intragastric balloon (IGB) placement has been performed in Japan since 2004. The nationwide surveys were repeatedly carried out to confirm the effectiveness and safety of IGB in Japan. We herein present the accumulated results. Methods Twenty‐six Japanese endoscopists personally imported products of the BioEnterics Intragastric Balloon (BIB)/Orbera system after completing the training courses in Japan. Mail surveys were posted to them every 2 years from 2010. This study included the accumulated data of the six surveys, and excluded data from non‐Japanese patients and the Orbera365 data. Results Between 2004 and 2019, 399 obese Japanese patients underwent IGB treatment using the BIB/Orbera system. The incidence rates of early removal of IGB within 1 week and complications due to IGB were 4.8% and 6.1%, respectively. The average percent excess weight loss (%EWL) and percent total weight loss (%TWL) at IGB removal were 46.6% and 11.5%, and successful weight loss, defined as %EWL ≥ 25% or %TWL ≥ 10%, was achieved in 65.6% or 54.5% of the patients, respectively. Multivariate analyses revealed that older age and larger saline filling volume were independent predictors of successful weight loss. At 1 year after IGB removal, successful weight loss defined by the %EWL and %TWL was maintained in 44.7% and 34.1% of the patients, respectively. Conclusion IGB therapy using the BIB/Orbera system has been safely and effectively performed in Japan. The successful weight loss may be associated with older age and larger saline filling volume.
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