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. 1997 Jul;25(1):317-22.
doi: 10.1097/00004836-199707000-00004.

Changes in serum pepsinogen, gastrin, and immunoglobulin G antibody titers in helicobacter pylori-positive gastric ulcer after eradication of infection

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Changes in serum pepsinogen, gastrin, and immunoglobulin G antibody titers in helicobacter pylori-positive gastric ulcer after eradication of infection

T Ohkusa et al. J Clin Gastroenterol. 1997 Jul.

Abstract

There are no studies of changes in immunoglobulin G (IgG) titers to Helicobacter pylori, serum pepsinogen, and gastrin in patients with H. pylori-positive gastric ulcers. We investigated the effect of therapy for H. pylori-positive gastric ulcer on IgG titers to H. pylori, serum pepsinogen I and II, and gastrin. Thirty-six patients with H. pylori-positive gastric ulcer were treated with lansorazole and antibiotics for 2 weeks. Serum pepsinogen I and II concentrations, serum gastrin, and IgG titers to H. pylori were measured before treatment and then at 4 and 12 weeks after stopping the treatment. The presence or eradication of H. pylori was determined using the rapid urease test and by histologic H. pylori staining. For 19 patients in whom H. pylori had been successfully eradicated, the pepsinogen I/II ratio increased, pepsinogen II levels decreased, and the anti-H. pylori IgG decreased compared with the results from before therapy and with those from 4 and 12 weeks after therapy. Gastrin levels decreased compared with pretreatment results and those from 4 weeks after the end of treatment. In 17 patients in whom the therapy failed to eradicate H. pylori infection, there were no sequential significant changes in the pepsinogen I/II ratio or in the levels of pepsinogen I, pepsinogen II, anti-H. pylori IgG, and gastrin. A decrease in the serum levels of the IgG antibody to H. pylori and gastrin and also an increase in the pepsinogen I/II ratio could be used as predictors for the eradication of H. pylori infection in gastric ulcer.

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