OBJECTIVES: To assess the severity and causes of inflammation of the gastric cardia in children undergoing endoscopy for symptoms of acid peptic disease. STUDY DESIGN: Patients undergoing upper gastrointestinal endoscopy for symptoms of acid peptic disease had biopsies from gastric cardia, gastric, and esophageal sites, and 24-hour intraesophageal pH monitoring. Gastric cardia was defined at endoscopy as the anatomic zone from the squamocolumnar junction to 0.5 cm below it. Severity of gastric cardia inflammation was scored 0 to 9 according to densities of inflammatory cells and epithelial abnormalities in surface and pit epithelium. A score > or =2 was considered positive. RESULTS: Forty-seven children (median age, 6.5 years; range, 3-15) had Helicobacter pylori infection, gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD), or both. In 22 patients, H pylori was detected in cardiac biopsies by rapid urease test and histology; it was detected also in the corpus and antrum in only seven of the 22. No patient had H pylori in gastric corpus/antrum without having the organism at the cardia as well. In 12 H pylori-positive patients, GERD was also diagnosed. Twenty-five patients had GERD and no H. pylori infection. Severity score was 3.8+/-0.8 in the H pylori group and 2.08+/-0.9 in the GERD alone group (P<.001); however, there was no difference in reflux index (24-hour % of gastroesophageal reflux) between the two groups. In neither group was correlation found between reflux index and severity score (H pylori, r=0.22; GERD alone, r=0.31; NS) nor between cardia inflammation and esophagitis grade (H pylori, r=0.37; GERD alone, r=0.22; NS). CONCLUSIONS: In children with symptoms of acid peptic disease, inflammation of the gastric cardia does occur. It is more severe when the cardiac zone is infected with H pylori than in its absence. Of major practical significance is the finding that the gastric cardia is a highly sensitive site for the detection of H pylori infection.
Inflammation of the gastric cardia in children with symptoms of acid peptic disease / Borrelli, O; Hassall, E; D'Armiento, FRANCESCO PAOLO; Bosco, S; Mancini, V; Di Nardo, G; Bueno de Mesquita, M; Cucchiara, S.. - In: THE JOURNAL OF PEDIATRICS. - ISSN 0022-3476. - STAMPA. - 143:5(2003), pp. 520-524.
Inflammation of the gastric cardia in children with symptoms of acid peptic disease.
D'ARMIENTO, FRANCESCO PAOLO;
2003
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To assess the severity and causes of inflammation of the gastric cardia in children undergoing endoscopy for symptoms of acid peptic disease. STUDY DESIGN: Patients undergoing upper gastrointestinal endoscopy for symptoms of acid peptic disease had biopsies from gastric cardia, gastric, and esophageal sites, and 24-hour intraesophageal pH monitoring. Gastric cardia was defined at endoscopy as the anatomic zone from the squamocolumnar junction to 0.5 cm below it. Severity of gastric cardia inflammation was scored 0 to 9 according to densities of inflammatory cells and epithelial abnormalities in surface and pit epithelium. A score > or =2 was considered positive. RESULTS: Forty-seven children (median age, 6.5 years; range, 3-15) had Helicobacter pylori infection, gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD), or both. In 22 patients, H pylori was detected in cardiac biopsies by rapid urease test and histology; it was detected also in the corpus and antrum in only seven of the 22. No patient had H pylori in gastric corpus/antrum without having the organism at the cardia as well. In 12 H pylori-positive patients, GERD was also diagnosed. Twenty-five patients had GERD and no H. pylori infection. Severity score was 3.8+/-0.8 in the H pylori group and 2.08+/-0.9 in the GERD alone group (P<.001); however, there was no difference in reflux index (24-hour % of gastroesophageal reflux) between the two groups. In neither group was correlation found between reflux index and severity score (H pylori, r=0.22; GERD alone, r=0.31; NS) nor between cardia inflammation and esophagitis grade (H pylori, r=0.37; GERD alone, r=0.22; NS). CONCLUSIONS: In children with symptoms of acid peptic disease, inflammation of the gastric cardia does occur. It is more severe when the cardiac zone is infected with H pylori than in its absence. Of major practical significance is the finding that the gastric cardia is a highly sensitive site for the detection of H pylori infection.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.