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Upper Gastro-intestinal tract: Inflammatory disease Paul L. Crotty TCD Medical Student Lecture October 2007 Outline Brief review of normal physiology Balance between hostile and protective factors Acute gastritis and acute stress ulcers Auto-immune gastritis Helicobacter gastritis: infection, outcomes Peptic ulcer disease NSAIDs and the GI tract Oesophageal disease Oesophagitis/Gastro-oesophageal reflux disease Gastro-intestinal tract Important to review normal physiology Functions: mechanical: directional motility/reservoir digestion of food/absorption of nutrients/fluid regulated processes: neural/hormonal input protection: auto-digestion/bacteria/antigens/toxins Regional specialisation Oesophagus tube to separate from respiratory system Stomach 1.2-1.5l reservoir, starts digestion Small intestine main site for digestion and absorption Large intestine water resorption Stomach Stomach Fundus/Corpus surface mucous cells and deep glands with Parietal cells: Hydrochloric acid, Intrinsic Factor Chief cells: Pepsinogen Endocrine cells: Histamine, Somatostatin Antrum surface mucous cells and mucous glands Mucous-producing cells Endocrine cells (G cells): Gastrin Normal fundic type mucosa Normal antral type mucosa Gastritis: stomach inflammation Normal antrum Gastritis Gastritis: stomach inflammation Gastritis Acute gastritis Chronic gastritis Type I Type II Type III Gastritis Acute gastritis: Acute stress ulceration acute ingestion of NSAIDs/alcohol severe trauma/sepsis/shock classically: ICU patient with multi-organ failure extensive burns (Curling’s ulcer) neurological disease (Cushing’s ulcer) predominantly decrease in protective factors risk of haemorrhage: acid suppression Acute gastritis Acute gastric stress ulcers Gastritis Chronic gastritis Type I: Auto-immune gastritis Progressive immune destruction of GPC Terminology Chronic superficial gastritis Chronic atrophic gastritis Gastric atrophy Pernicious anaemia Auto-immune gastritis Circulating auto-antibodies (anti-GPC, intrinsic factor, proton pump) Inflammation and atrophy involving fundus/corpus Low secretion of acid +/- enzymes Compensatory high serum gastrin levels Associated with other auto-immune diseases/HLA Secretion of intrinsic factor decreased Associated with low serum B12/ megaloblastic anaemia Anti-gastric parietal cell antibodies Auto-immune gastritis Inflammation Loss of gastric parietal cell mass/mucosal atrophy Increasing time Auto-immune gastritis Inflammation Atrophy Increasing time Auto-immune gastritis Atrophy Intestinal metaplasia Risk of dysplasia and malignancy Increasing time Early stage Auto-immune gastritis Later stage: Atrophy and intestinal metaplasia Gastritis Chronic gastritis Type II: Not auto-immune in origin Different distribution: antral-predominant Acid secretion increased (some normal) Serum gastrin normal (some increased) Concept crystallised with discovery of the role of... Helicobacter pylori Chronic gastritis Type II: Helicobacter pylori gastritis evidence for role of H. pylori in gastritis/ulcer epidemiology • 90% of patients with duodenal ulcer • 70% with gastritis/gastric ulcer (80-90% if not taking NSAIDs) treatment effect • Hp clearance leads to ulcer healing • High recurrence after ulcer healing without Hp clearance experimental ingestion There is no doubt that Marshall, 46, has been one hell of a salesman. That helps explain why he is so well known for a discovery which stemmed from the observations of a colleague, Dr Robin Warren. In the early 1980s, Warren, a pathologist at Royal Perth Hospital, had become resigned to unkind jokes from his peers about his theory that an unusual bug he was seeing down his microscope had some role in causing stomach inflammation. No-one had taken much notice because it was such an outlandish notion. Everyone knew that bacteria couldn't survive in the stomach's acid environment. They'd been taught so at medical school. "When Barry spoke he was very brash, "... that I've discovered this and that you people are going to have to relearn all your medicine because we've now worked out what is really going on'," Hazell remembers. "The vast majority of the medical profession, not only in Australia but worldwide, considered Barry to be a quack and really were extremely dismissive for a number of years." Testing The Most Curious Subject Oneself By Kathryn S. Brown One July day in 1984, Barry Marshall, a medical resident at the Fremantle Hospital in Perth, Western Australia, walked over to his lab bench, pulled down a beaker, and mixed a cocktail. The key ingredient: about a billion Helicobacter pylori bacteria. Marshall hoped to show that the microorganism causes ulcers. He gulped the concoction, describing it as "swamp water." PHYSICIAN, STUDY THYSELF: Barry Marshall's daring experiment eventually garnered him awards. One hundred years earlier, Max von Pettenkofer, a chemist in Munich, Germany, performed a similar experiment. Von Pettenkofer was eager to prove the recently identified Vibrio cholerae bacterium could not, on its own, cause cholera. His cocktail ingredients: bouillon and the deadly cholerae. He, too, gulped his potion. Marshall was correct. He suffered an inflamed stomach. Von Pettenkofer was incorrect. Historical 1899: Jaworski: spiral organisms in gastric washings 1924: Luck and Seth: antibiotic-sensitive urease activity in stomach 1938: Doenges: spirochaetes in autopsy stomach (40%) But the dogma was that: The stomach was sterile, all isolates were ‘contaminants’ 1975: Steer: bacteria seen in 80% of gastric ulcer patients 1979: Fung: bacteria seen in patients with chronic gastritis 1983: Warren: correlated with presence of neutrophils 1983-87: Marshall sells the concept world-wide Helicobacter Gram negative, curved/spiral organism Motile, flagellate organism > 20 different species Adapted to niche of life in the stomach Helicobacter pylori prevalence Bacteriology Colonisation motility: flagellae urease enzyme activity acute infection causes transient hypochlorhydria Adherence bacterial adhesins (BabA) Tissue Injury lipopolysaccharide, cagA, vacA, others Diagnosis of H. pylori infection Diagnosis of H. pylori infection Diagnosis of H. pylori infection Diagnosis of H. pylori infection Transmission Not well understood: no animal reservoir Person-person:? Vomitus ? Gastro-oral ? Dental plaque What is known about acute infection? - deliberate ingestion (Marshall) - endoscope-mediated transmission Acute infection causes transient epigastric pain/nausea Histology: Acute neutrophilic gastritis Acute Helicobacter infection - Epithelial cells are the initial sensor of contact with pathogen - Bacterial factors: cagA, (?others) induce IL-8 secretion by the gastric epithelial cells (also IL-6, IL-7, IL-15) - IL8: chemotactic, activates neutrophils - IL-6, IL-7, IL-15: activate antigen-specific response -Bacterial lipopolysaccharide: directly chemotactic -Acute neutrophilic response Establishing chronic active infection However H. pylori remains intra-luminal, so - Neutrophil response fails to clear bacterium - Bacterial persistence sets up T-cell dependent response: lymphocytes, plasma cells - Neutrophil response persists => Chronic active gastritis Chronic active gastritis --> (Acute) --> Chronic active gastritis Different possible outcomes --> Antral-predominant gastritis --> duodenal ulcer --> Multi-focal atrophic gastritis --> gastric ulcer --> intestinal metaplasia --> risk of dysplasia --> adenocarcinoma --> Gastric lymphoma (lymphoma of MALT) Peptic ulcer Ulcer: full thickness breach in the mucosa Erosion: mucosal disruption but nit full thickness Peptic ulcer: Any chronic ulcer in the GI tract in association with damage caused by acid/peptic juices Duodenum, usually first part Stomach, usually antrum/pyloric channel OGJ Anastomosis Meckel’s diverticulum Duodenal ulceration H. pylori live exclusively on gastric surface mucous cells. They cannot survive on intestinal epithelial cells - So, how does H. pylori infection in the stomach cause ulceration in the duodenum? How does H. pylori infection in the stomach cause ulceration in the duodenum? Compare DU versus Non-DU patients with Hp infection DU patients have - lower IL-1beta production - higher acid output - more antral-predominant gastritis - high Gastrin with failure of feedback inhibition - increased parietal cell mass Delivery of excess acid into duodenum Induces gastric metaplasia in duodenum H. pylori infection of (metaplastic) gastric cells Direct cell injury, cell death, erosion, ulceration Duodenal ulceration Normal duodenum Two duodenal ulcers Left: Two duodenal ulcers: one with sentinel clot Right: Ulcer with visible vessel Chronic peptic ulcer Chronic peptic ulceration Complications Haemorrhage (GU, DU) Perforation with acute abdomen (GU, DU) Penetration with pancreatitis (DU) Scarring and obstruction (Pyloric channel, DU) Subset of ulcers not related to Hp Crohn’s disease NSAIDs Hypergastrinaemia: Zollinger-Ellison Hyperparathyroidism Other potential outcomes of chronic Hp infection: Multi-focal atrophic gastritis Atrophy: mechanism? Intestinal metaplasia: mechanism ? - teleological explanation: promote Hp clearance Dysplasia Malignancy Unanswered patho-physiological questions: - What factors determine which course a patient will follow with chronic Hp infection: duodenal ulceration: multi-focal atrophic gastritis: gastric ulcer: lymphoma? Host factors (genetic or environmental) or bacterial factors? NSAIDs and the GI tract -Acute gastritis, acute erosions/ulcers -Chronic gastric ulcers -Type III chronic gastritis: chemical gastropathy Effects secondary to COX-1 inhibition - inhibition of PGE2, PGI2, PGF2a production - PGs protect by regulation of mucosal blood flow - NSAID effect is essentially mucosal ischaemia Also direct mucosal toxic effects (COX-independent) - increase pepsin activity (?) - experimentally: NSAID effect is less if neutropenic Non-neoplastic oesophageal disease Oesophageal varices: portal hypertension Achalasia Mallory-Weiss oesophageal lacerations Oesophagitis GORD allergic infectious chemical other *Barrett’s oesophagus Oesophagitis Pathological term: inflammation of the oesophagus Causes of oesophagitis Gastro-oesophageal reflux disease Eosinophilic oesophagitis associated with bronchial asthma Fungal: e.g. Candida Viral: e.g Herpes, CMV Ingestion of irritants, corrosives Chemotherapy, radiation Systemic skin diseases: e.g. pemphigoid Graft-versus host disease Gastro-oesophageal reflux disease Retrograde movement of stomach contents to oesophagus Acid, pepsin: direct mucosal toxicity, inflammation Normally, reflux prevented by: lower oesophageal sphincter anatomic structure oesophageal peristaltic clearance swallowed saliva gravity Gastro-oesophageal reflux disease Clinical: symptoms of heartburn Endoscopic: red/congested mucosa Manometric: decreased sphincter pressure pH measurement: frequency of dips in pH <4 Pathological: microscopic evidence of oesophagitis Clinical Endoscopic Microscopic complications Ulceration Haemorrhage Fibrotic stricture Aspiration Barrett’s oesophagus risk of dysplasia and malignancy Barrett’s oesophagus As a long term complications of reflux, the normal squamous mucosa of the oesophagus becomes replaced by glandular mucosa clinical importance is when it is replaced by intestinal-type mucosa: intestinal metaplasia can lead to dysplasia and adenocarcinoma Summary Brief review of normal physiology Balance between hostile and protective factors Acute gastritis and acute stress ulcers Auto-immune gastritis Helicobacter gastritis: infection, outcomes Peptic ulcer disease NSAIDs and the GI tract Oesophageal disease Oesophagitis/Gastro-oesophageal reflux disease