Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Pathogenesis of Diseases of the Stomach

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Pathogenesis of Diseases of the Stomach"— Presentation transcript:

1 Pathogenesis of Diseases of the Stomach
Dr Paul L. Crotty Department of Pathology AMNCH, Tallaght October 2008

2 Classification of Disease by Aetiology
Congenital Acquired Infection Physical/Trauma Chemical/Toxic Circulatory disturbances Immunological disturbance Degenerative disorders Iatrogenic Idiopathic Multifactorial Various: radiation, nutritional deficiency, psychosomatic Pre-neoplastic/ Neoplastic

3 Stomach: classification by aetiology
Congenital: Congenital pyloric stenosis Acquired Infection: Helicobacter gastritis Physical/Trauma: Chemical/Toxic: Acute gastritis/Acute stress ulcer Circulatory disturbances: (Acute gastritis/Acute stress ulcer) Immunological disturbance: Autoimmune gastritis Degenerative disorders Iatrogenic: Idiopathic:: Hypertrophic gastropathy Multifactorial: Pre-neoplastic/ Neoplastic: Intestinal metaplasia,-> dysplasia -> intetsinal type adenocarcinoma Signet ring cell carcinoma GI stromal tumours, lymphoma, other

4 Stomach: classification by aetiology
Congenital: Congenital pyloric stenosis Acquired Infection: Helicobacter gastritis PEPTIC ULCER DISEASE Physical/Trauma: Chemical/Toxic: Acute gastritis PEPTIC ULCER DISEASE Circulatory disturbances: Acute gastritis Immunological disturbance: Autoimmune gastritis Degenerative disorders Iatrogenic: Idiopathic:: Hypertrophic gastropathy Multifactorial: PEPTIC ULCER DISEASE Pre-neoplastic/ Neoplastic: Intestinal metaplasia,-> dysplasia -> intetsinal type adenocarcinoma Signet ring cell carcinoma GI stromal tumours, lymphoma, other

5 Normal stomach Functions
Food reservoir with regulated delivery to small intestine Defence against ingested bacteria, toxins Mixing of food, initiation of digestion of nutrients Defence against auto-digestion Role in vitamin B12 absorption: intrinsic factor

6 Normal stomach To achieve these functions
Distensibility up to litres Pyloric sphincter, coordinated contraction Production of hydrochloric acid Muscle contraction -> churning effect Production of digestive enzymes (pepsin) Mucosal protection system Intrinsic factor production Neural, endocrine coordination

7 Stomach

8 Stomach Fundus/Corpus Antrum surface mucous cells and deep glands with
Parietal cells: Hydrochloric acid, Intrinsic Factor Chief cells: Pepsinogen (-> Pepsin) Endocrine cells: Histamine, Somatostatin Antrum surface mucous cells and mucous glands Mucous-producing cells Endocrine cells (G cells): Gastrin

9 Normal fundic type mucosa

10 Normal antral type mucosa

11

12 Mucosal protection system
Mucous secretion Bicarbonate Epithelial tight junctions High blood flow to submucosa Central role of prostaglandins

13 Acute gastritis/Acute stress ulcer
Depletion in mucosal protection system Acid/enzyme injury to gastric mucosa Inflammation, erosions, ulceration

14 Acute gastritis/Acute stress ulcer
Risk factors Aspirin, NSAIDs Alcohol (acute excess) Heavy smoking Chemotherapy Acute ill patients/ ICU trauma, sepsis, shock extensive burns (Curling’s ulcer) Neurological disease (Cushing’s ulcer)

15 Acute gastritis/Acute stress ulcer
Complications Ulceration Bleeding Perforation

16 Endoscopy Acute gastritis Normal antrum

17 Acute gastritis Acute gastric stress ulcers

18 Stomach: classification by aetiology
Congenital: Congenital pyloric stenosis Acquired Infection: Helicobacter gastritis Physical/Trauma: Chemical/Toxic: Acute gastritis/Acute stress ulcer Circulatory disturbances: (Acute gastritis/Acute stress ulcer) Immunological disturbance: Autoimmune gastritis Degenerative disorders Iatrogenic: Idiopathic:: Hypertrophic gastropathy Multifactorial: Pre-neoplastic/ Neoplastic: Intestinal metaplasia,-> dysplasia -> intetsinal type adenocarcinoma Signet ring cell carcinoma GI stromal tumours, lymphoma, other

19 Chronic gastritis Type I: Autoimmune gastritis
Type II: Helicobacter gastritis (Type III: Chemical gastropathy NSAIDs)

20 Chronic gastritis Chronic gastritis Type I: Auto-immune gastritis
Progressive immune destruction of GPC Terminology Chronic superficial gastritis Chronic atrophic gastritis Gastric atrophy Pernicious anaemia

21 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

22 Anti-gastric parietal cell antibodies

23 Auto-immune gastritis
Inflammation Loss of gastric parietal cell mass/mucosal atrophy Increasing time

24 Auto-immune gastritis
Inflammation Atrophy Increasing time

25 Auto-immune gastritis
Atrophy Intestinal metaplasia Risk of dysplasia and malignancy Increasing time

26 Auto-immune gastritis
Early stage Auto-immune gastritis Later stage: Atrophy and intestinal metaplasia

27 Chronic 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...

28 Helicobacter pylori

29 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

30

31

32

33 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 : Marshall sells the concept world-wide

34 Helicobacter Gram negative, curved/spiral organism
Motile, flagellate organism > 20 different species Adapted to niche of life in the stomach

35 Helicobacter pylori prevalence

36

37 Bacteriology Colonisation motility: flagellae urease enzyme activity
acute infection causes transient hypochlorhydria Adherence bacterial adhesins (BabA) Tissue Injury lipopolysaccharide, cagA, vacA, others

38 Diagnosis of H. pylori infection

39 Diagnosis of H. pylori infection

40 Diagnosis of H. pylori infection

41 Diagnosis of H. pylori infection

42 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

43 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

44 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

45 Chronic active gastritis

46 Different possible outcomes --> Antral-predominant 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)

47 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?

48 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 - 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

49 Peptic ulcer disease Ulcer: full thickness breach in mucosa extendinf to submucosa (at least) Erosion: partial thickness breach in mucosa Peptic ulcer: chronic ulcer secondary to acid/enzymes anywhere in GI tract first part of duodenum stomach, antrum or prepyloric other distal oesophagus, Meckel’s diverticulum

50 Peptic ulcer disease Helicobacter pylori infection
chronic use of aspirin, NSAIDs heavy smoking corticosteroids hyperacidity: Zollinger-Ellison syndrome in patients with: cirrhosis, COPD, CRF, hyperparathyroidism

51 Peptic ulcer disease Complications
Bleeding: chronic low level -> anaemia Massive acute bleeding Perforation Scarring -> obctruction Penetration -> pancreatitis

52 Hypertrophic gastropathy
Thickened stomach wall, thickened folds Menetrier’s disease expansion of foveolae, increased mucin can lead to protein loss into lumen Hypertrophic-hypersecretory gastropathy increased fundic glands Hyperplasia of glands secondary to Zollinger-Ellison syndrome gastrinoma -> hyperacidity -> ulcers

53 Stomach: classification by aetiology
Congenital: Congenital pyloric stenosis Acquired Infection: Helicobacter gastritis PEPTIC ULCER DISEASE Physical/Trauma: Chemical/Toxic: Acute gastritis PEPTIC ULCER DISEASE Circulatory disturbances: Acute gastritis Immunological disturbance: Autoimmune gastritis Degenerative disorders Iatrogenic: Idiopathic:: Hypertrophic gastropathy Multifactorial: PEPTIC ULCER DISEASE Pre-neoplastic/ Neoplastic: Intestinal metaplasia,-> dysplasia -> intetsinal type adenocarcinoma Signet ring cell carcinoma GI stromal tumours, lymphoma, other


Download ppt "Pathogenesis of Diseases of the Stomach"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google