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Treatment of Helicobacter pylori

Current Opinion in Gastroenterology, 2001
Helicobacter pylori causes several gastroduodenal diseases. Various antibiotic regimens are available that eradicate H. pylori in 80 to 90% of patients, but no regimen cures all patients. Dual therapy is now obsolete. Triple therapy with two antibiotics and either a proton pump inhibitor or bismuth is the regimens of choice.
J S, Hoffman, D R, Cave
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Carcinogenesis of Helicobacter pylori

Gastroenterology, 2007
Helicobacter infection is the leading cause of gastric cancer worldwide. Infection with this ubiquitous bacterium incites a chronic active immune response that persists for the life of the host, in the absence of antibiotic-induced eradication. It is the combination of bacterial factors, environmental insults, and the host immune response that drives ...
Pelayo, Correa, Jeanmarie, Houghton
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[Helicobacter pylori].

Ugeskrift for laeger, 1992
Helicobacter pylori (HP) are Gram-negative spiral bacteria which occur in the human stomach. The bacteria were cultured in vitro for the first time in 1983. It is suspected that the bacteria may cause chronic gastritis of type B and may also be a contributory cause of chronic ulceration and cancer of the stomach.
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Garlic and Helicobacter pylori

The American Journal of Gastroenterology, 2000
TO THE EDITOR: We have read with interest the clinical trial by Graham and coworkers (1) using garlic and jalapeno peppers for the treatment of Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) infections, and would like to make some general comments on the methodology of the trial, particularly the "treatment." In the trial, 12 subjects were treated on separate days ...
G B, Mahady, S, Pendland
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Helicobacter pylori and endoscopy

Journal of Hospital Infection, 1999
Helicobacter pylori is possibly the most common bacterial infection of humans and is now recognized as the most important acquired cause of peptic ulceration. Epidemiological evidence also recently implicated this bacterium in the pathogenesis of gastric cancer.
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Heterogeneity of Helicobacter pylori

European Journal of Gastroenterology & Hepatology, 2012
Although many physicians view Helicobacter pylori strains as a homogenous group of organisms, it has become increasingly clear that populations in humans are highly diverse. This heterogeneity can be analyzed at two different levels: genotypic variation among strains and variations in H. pylori populations within an individual host. Genotypic variation
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Immunoproteome of Helicobacter pylori

2002
Publisher Summary This chapter describes how two-dimensional electrophoresis (2-DE) techniques can be combined with various immunoblotting procedures and how such data sets from infected patients can be evaluated in a semiquantitative manner as a basis for the development of sensitive and specific diagnostic tests.
Jungblut, Peter R., Bumann, Dirk
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Adherence of Helicobacter pylori

Alimentary Pharmacology & Therapeutics, 1996
Helicobacter pylori infects only gastric type epithelium, to which it adheres closely and forms attaching‐effacing lesions. Similar lesions are also seen in ferrets infected with Helicobacter mustelae, the only other host in which peptic ulcer occurs during the course of infection.
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Helicobacter pylori and apoptosis

2002
Publisher Summary Apoptosis associated with Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) may be studied by one of the two approaches: either by staining human and animal gastric tissue sections, or by coculturing H. pylori with gastric cells in vitro. The advantage of a coculture system is that the target cell and bacterium may be readily manipulated, thus ...
Emilia Mia, Sordillo, Steven F, Moss
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Helicobacter pylori – 2010

Orvosi Hetilap, 2010
A 27 éve felfedezettHelicobacter pyloriaz eltelt évtizedekben a földkerekség leggyakoribb fertőzése maradt. A szerző feltételezi, hogy a peptikus fekély gyakoriságának XIX–XX. századi emelkedését a gyomorszondázás széles körű elterjedése segíthette elő, amelynek során a baktérium iatrogén átvitelével a patogén törzsek terjedhettek el.
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