Home Bratislava Medical Journal 2014 Bratislava Medical Journal Vol.115, No.4, p.221-228, 2014

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Published Monthly, in English
Founded: 1919
ISSN 0006-9248
(E)ISSN 1336-0345

Impact factor 1.564

 

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Bratislava Medical Journal Vol.115, No.4, p.221-228, 2014

Title: A pilot study of Helicobacter pylori genotypes and cytokine gene polymorphisms in reflux oesophagitis and peptic ulcer disease
Author: R. A. Akdogan, O. Ozgur, S. Gucuyeter, N. Kaklikkaya, U. Cobanoglu, F. Aydin

Abstract:

Helicobacter pylori causes various diseases such as chronic gastritis, peptic ulcer and gastric cancer. While majority of the people infected with H. pylori is asymptomatic, 15–20 % of them develop such diseases. The main factors, which determine the development of H. pylori related diseases might be bacterial virulence, host genetic and environmental factors.
The aim of this study was to reveal the factors that play a role in the disease development in patients with reflux esophagitis and peptic ulcer, infected with Helicobacter pylori. Environmental factors such as medical agents, smoking and body mass index were evaluated. The factors specific to bacteria such as vacA, CagA, babA and iceA virulence genotypes and the host factors such as IL-1, IL-2, IL-4, IL-6, IL-10, IL-12, interferon-γ, TNF-α, ve TGF-β1 gene polymorphisms were compared between the two groups.
H. pylori infected twenty five patients with reflux esophagitis and peptic ulcer were enrolled in the study.

There was no statistical difference between the two groups regarding environmental factors. IL-2 –330T +166T (p=0.037) and IL10 –1082A; –819C (p=0.049) gene polymorphisms were significantly more common in the group of patients with peptic ulcer compared to the group with reflux esophagitis.

In both groups of patients, either with reflux esophagitis or peptic ulcer, multiple H. pylori virulence genotypes (cagA, vacA, babA) (mean values 74 %, 78 %, 54 % respectively) were observed.
In this study, we revealed that cytokine gene polymorphisms may play a role in the development peptic ulcer while H. pylori virulence genotypes seem to be crucial for the development of associated diseases (Tab. 4, Ref. 51).



Keywords: Helicobacter pylori genotypes, single nucleotide polymorphisms, reflux oesophagitis, peptic ulcer.
Year: 2014, Volume: 115, Issue: 4 Page From: 221, Page To: 228
doi:10.4149/BLL_2014_046


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