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Minerva Chirurgica 1999 June;54(6):411-4

Copyright © 1999 EDIZIONI MINERVA MEDICA

language: Italian

Behaviour of Helicobacter pylori in third and fourth-age bracked patients

Daturi R., Matti C., Nicolato A., Giacobone E., Cipolli P. L., Romero E., Pannella A., Tattarletti L., Bonacasa R., Brunati S., Zambianchi M.


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Aims and background. Helicobacter pylori is known to be the pathogenic agent of atrophic gastritis and above all ulcer disease. It is also thought to play a role, together with other factors, in the development of stomach cancer and is currently the focus of numerous studies. In industrialised countries, infection is relatively commonplace in children, whereas its incidence rises more steeply in patients aged over 35, reaching a mean prevalence of 50% in over 60 year olds.
Methods. During 1997 the authors carried out an epidemiological study to assay levels of anti-Helicobacter pylori (IgG anti-Hp) in a sample of 91 aged patients hospitalised in the S. Margherita Geriatric Hospital in Pavia. The patients had been admitted to hospital for various pathologies and the study also took into account gastric pathologies which usually, particularly in neoplastic forms, prefers the third and fourth ages. The assay for antibodies was performed using mouse monoclonal antibody, specific for Helicobacter pylori, absorbed on a polyester pad. A total of 5 ml of blood were collected from each patient. The blood samples were all centrifuged and the serum frozen at -20°C until the tests were performed.
Results. In this study, 46 of the 91 patients tested were positive for anti-Helicobacter pylori antibodies, 35 were negative and 10 borderline.
Conclusions. The high level of positive results found in these patients is in line with the findings reported by other authors.

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