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Author(s):  
Seerwan Hama rashid Ali ◽  
Sabiha Sharif Salih ◽  
Taib Ahmed Hama Sour ◽  
Goran Mohammad Raouf ◽  
Araz Latif Rahim

Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) bacteria are a microaerobic Gram negative that colonizes in the gastric and duodenum of human. It can cause prolong infection in the human life if not treated. Many of the studies showed that infection by H. pylori can cause some important gastrointestinal illness, such as peptic ulcer, chronic gastritis, gastric adenocarcinoma and mucosa associated lymphoid tissue lymphoma. Recurrence is generally considered as H. pylori recrudescence infection after one year of eradicated treatment. There are many factors involved in the H pylori reinfection, such as the epidemiology of H. pylori infection, condition of the live, development of economical state, and health conditions. The Objectives of this study were to estimate the incidence and determine the risk factors of infection by H. pylori bacteria in dyspeptic patients in Sulaimani city. And the Aims are to estimate prevalence of the Helicobacter pylori and patients’ characteristics in Sulaimani city. This is a cross-sectional study, using a Urea breath test or stained the gastric sample with Giemsa stain, which is including adult participants aged (12-87) years during the period starting from 1 January until 31 December 2020 on Iraqi male and female patients were visiting –Center for Gastroenterology and Hepatology in Sulaimani, city, Iraq. Three hundred and four patients were included, all of them underwent Urea breath test only but eighty-one of the participants underwent endoscopy and stained the gastric sample with Giemsa stain. Urea breath test for Helicobacter pylori was positive in54.9% which have significant correlation with risk factor findings. Results: the incidence rate of H. pylori infection in our study is 54.9%, and mean age of the study participants was (40.49 ±16.39) one hundred and ninety-one cases 62.8% were female and 113 cases 37.2%were male. Infection by H. pylori bacteria is rife in dyspeptic patients; and is more common in the age group of 31-40 years. One of noninvasive test to diagnosis H. pylori is Urea breath test.  In conclusions the rate of helicobacter pylori infection in our study is 54.9% among the symptomatic patients, and the overall incidence of H. pylori UBT and Giemsa stain detection rate were 73.4 and 26.6% respectively.  



1999 ◽  
Vol 277 (5) ◽  
pp. R1291-R1296 ◽  
Author(s):  
U. Smedh ◽  
J. M. Kaplan ◽  
E. Björkstrand ◽  
K. Uvnäs-Moberg

The effect of the somatostatin analog agonist octreotide (Oct) on gastric emptying of 12.5% glucose during and after intragastric fill was examined in nondeprived rats equipped with stainless steel gastric fistulas. The rate of intragastric infusion (1.0 ml/min) and the volumes delivered (6 or 12 ml) were within the ranges typically observed in rats normally ingesting the same stimulus. In experiment 1, a dose-related suppression of glucose emptying during 12-min infusions was obtained in response to Oct (0, 0.0014, 0.014, 0.14, and 1.4 nmol/kg sc) injected 60 min before the test. The highest dose tested yielded a 37% suppression of glucose solute emptying during fill. In experiment 2, the suppression of emptying during fill induced by Oct (1.4 nmol/kg) was reversed by 10 or 40 μg/kg of the somatostatin antagonist cyclo(7-aminoheptanoyl-Phe-d-Trp-Lys-Thr[Bzl]). The antagonist did not by itself affect emptying. Experiment 3 showed that the suppression of emptying obtained with 0.14 and 1.4 nmol/kg Oct had disappeared when the gastric sample was withdrawn 36 min after the termination of 12-min glucose infusions. Experiment 4 showed that the Oct-induced reductions in emptying during 6- and 12-min infusions, in fact, were reversed within 6 min after infusion offset. The point of transition between suppressed and increased emptying did not depend on time from injection or from infusion onset but was linked to the offset of the intragastric infusion regardless of its duration. The present findings support the notion that separable mechanisms govern gastric emptying during vs. after gastric fill.



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