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  Vol. 132 No. 4, April 1997 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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Seroprevalence of Helicobacter pylori in Patients With Surgical Peptic Ulcer

Wei-Jei Lee, MD, PhD; Ming-Sen Wu, MD; Chiung-Nien Chen, MD; Ray-Huang Yuan, MD; Jaw-Town Lin; King-Jen Chang, MD, PhD

Arch Surg. 1997;132(4):430-433.


Abstract

Background
Helicobacter pylori is known as a major cofactor in ulcerogenesis. However, the role of H pylori in surgical patients with peptic ulcer and its possible influence on surgical treatment is unclear.

Objectives
To determine the prevalence of H pylori infection in surgical patients with complicated peptic ulcer diseases and analyze its clinical significance.

Design
A prospective, controlled study.

Setting
University-affiliated hospital and tertiary care center.

Subjects
Two study groups: surgical group (n=66), ie, patients who received surgical treatment for their peptic ulcer disease), and control group (n=377) comprising 3 subgroups: normal volunteers (NV subgroup, n= 136) and patients who required only medical treatment for duodenal ulcer (DU subgroup, n= 119)19) or gastric ulcer (GU subgroup, n=122) from January 1, 1994 to June 30, 1995.

Methods
Preoperative or overnight fasting serum samples were collected, and H pylori state was assessed by serum anti—H pylori IgG.

Results
Seropositivity was similar between the surgical group (60.6%) and NV control subgroup (58.8%), but it was highest in the DU control subgroup (87.4%) (P<.001 compared with NV control subgroup), followed by GU control subgroup (76.2%) (P<.01 compared NV). The patients with surgical peptic ulcer who had both seropositive and seronegative results for H pylori were similar for sex, age, social status, ulcer history, associated major medical problems, use of nonsteroid antiinflammatory drugs, ulcer location, type of surgery, and ulceration recurrence rate. Although patients who underwent elective surgery had a higher seroprevalence rate (88.9%) than those requring emergency surgery (56.4%) and patients who were seronegative for H pylori seemed to be associated with a higher major morbidity, these results were not statistically significant.

Conclusion
No significant association of H pylori infection and peptic ulcer was noted between patients who required surgical treatment compared with those who required only medical treatment; H pylori played only a limited role in the cause of disease in surgical patients, perhaps only in the cases complicated with stenosis or intractable ulcers. This suggests that presently adequate acid reduction procedure will still be the main objective of surgical treatment and prevention of the ulcer recurrence.

Arch Surg. 1997;132:430-433



Author Affiliations

From the Departments of Surgery (Drs Lee, Chen, Yuan, and Chang) and Internal Medicine (Drs Wu and Lin), National Taiwan University Hospital, Taipei, Taiwan, Republic of China.



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THIS ARTICLE HAS BEEN CITED BY OTHER ARTICLES

Perforated Duodenal Ulcer
de Boer and Molmenti
NEJM 1997;337:1013-1013.
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