1 / 21

Helicobacter pylori

Helicobacter pylori. Clinical Medicine.Medical department.Shandong University. Introduction.

johnna
Download Presentation

Helicobacter pylori

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Helicobacter pylori Clinical Medicine.Medical department.Shandong University.

  2. Introduction .The stomach secretes gastric juice every day. Gastric juice consists of digestive enzymes and concentrated hydrochloric acid, which can tear apart the toughest food and microorganism.It used to be thought that the stomach contained no bacteria and was actually sterile, but H. pylori changed that view. Why and how does HP cause diseases? Let’s talk about HP in this lecture?

  3. Contents • General description of H.pylori • Biological characteristics of H.pylori • Defense mechanism of H.pylori • Pathogenesis • Detection and treatment • Epidemiology

  4. Generaldescription of H. pylori 1.H. pylori is a newly discovered stomach infection which was first reported by Barry Marshall and Robin Warren of Perth, Western Australia, in 1983. 2. The bacterium lives in the stomach of about half the people in the world. Many are apparently well, and most have an inflammation of the stomach lining, a condition which is called "gastritis". 3. Gastritis is the underlying condition which causes ulcers and other digestive complaints, possibly including cancerof the stomach.

  5. Biological properties of H. pylori

  6. Morphology and structure • G- bacteria • S or spiral-shaped bacterium • HP have typical morphology • Almost all the bacteria have the same size length:2.5~4.0μm width:0.5~1.0μm

  7. Submicroscopic structure of H.pylori • There are 2~6 flagella at one end of HP • The flagella can exist at two ends during fission • Flagella play important role in motion and adhesion • HP is enclosed by glucocalyx after the treatment of acid

  8. Defense mechanism of H.pylori 1. Reaction of urea hydrolysis • Once H. pylori is ensconced in the mucus, it is able to fight the stomach acid that does reach it with an enzyme called urease. • Urease converts urea, of which there is an abundant supply in the stomach (from saliva and gastric juices), into bicarbonate and ammonia, which are strong bases. This creates a cloud of acid neutralizing chemicals around the H. pylori, protecting it from the acid in the stomach. • The reaction of urea hydrolysis is important for diagnosis of H.pylori by the breath test.

  9. Defense mechanism of H.pylori 2. Escape of natural defense Escape means that the body's natural defenses cannot reach the bacterium in the mucus lining of the stomach. The immune system will respond to an H. pylori infection by sending white cells, killer T cells, and other infection fighting agents which cannot easily get through stomach lining. Infection fighting agents do not go away either and the immune response grows and grows. Polymorphnucleas die, and spill their destructive compounds (superoxide radicals) on stomach lining cells.

  10. Pathogenesis Cytotoxin associated proteins(Cag A) and Vac A is the main factor of the virulence LPS also play great importance Flagellum and urease is necessary for its adhesion and inhabitation Adhesin

  11. Diseases Associated with Helicobacter pylori Duodenal Ulcers Gastric (Stomach) Ulcers Non-ulcer dyspepsia Weird Syndromes Stomach Cancer

  12. Treatment Treatment of H. pylori is usually simple but patients need repeated endoscopies, biopsies, and several courses of treatment with antibiotic drugs.

  13. Epidemiology H.pylori affects about 20% of persons below the age of 40 years, and 50% of those above the age of 60 years. H.pylori is uncommon in young children. Low socio-economic status predicts H.pylori infection. Immigration is responsible for isolated areas of high revalence in some Western countries.

  14. Infective ratio all over the world

  15. Animal Helicobacters As pups, dogs catch it from their mother and have gastritis. When they grow up the Helicobacter appears to be pretty harmless. However, dog and cat helicobacter have been found in humans. Don't let dogs lick you or your children on the face and mouth (nor cats). The picture on the right is a dog helicobacter from a patient who kept two red setters in his house all his life

  16. Prospect of Helicobacter pylori The study of H.pylori has lasted for 20 years since it was found by Warren and Marshall in 1983. During the past 20 years,all the passages published on HP have reached 14000,that means the study of HP is one of the most hot fields. Try our best to conquer it!

  17. Thank all my partners StaffLei Wu Wei Ma Peng Hao Hui WangFudi ChenLipan PengXiaolei Wang Shuncui GaoGuangbin Cui Hongyan Zhao Yongjun Zhao Huaqing Wang

More Related