Chronic atrophic gastritis: Early diagnosis in a population where Helicobacter pylori infection is frequent

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Abstract

Chronic atrophic gastritis (CAG) is a premalignant condition characterized by loss of gastric antral deep glands. The histologic changes in antral gastric biopsy specimens from 54 Peruvian patients with dyspepsia were studied to detail the development and characteristics of CAG. Ninety- six percent of the biopsies revealed severe superficial mucosal inflammation and 89% showed deep inflammation. Moderate or severe CAG was present in 36 (67%) of the 54 patients. In the early stages of CAG, a glandular lymphoid adherence lesion was noted in 17 (31%) of the 54 biopsy specimens. This lesion consisted of lymphocytes adherent to the antral deep gland cells and was associated with glandular epithelium alterations. The late stage was characterized by small glands, remnants of glands, and gland replacement with a fibrocellular infiltrate or intestinal metaplasia. We propose that the development of CAG probably proceeds via a stereotyped sequence, with an early deep inflammatory component that may trigger local gland destruction and eventual permanent loss.

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Recavarren-Arce, S., Gilman, R. H., Leon-Barua, R., Salazar, G., McDonald, J., Lozano, R., … Valdez, J. (1997). Chronic atrophic gastritis: Early diagnosis in a population where Helicobacter pylori infection is frequent. In Clinical Infectious Diseases (Vol. 25, pp. 1006–1012). Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1086/516080

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