Helicobacter gastritis

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Helicobacter gastritis
Diagnosis in short

Helicobacter gastritis. Helicobacter IHC.

LM helicobacter organisms, moderate chronic active gastritis (neutrophils esp. at the luminal aspect/intraepithelial, numerous plasma cell clusters)
Subtypes Helicobacter pylori, Helicobacter heilmannii
LM DDx chronic gastritis
Stains Diff Quik stain, Cresyl violet stain, Warthin-Starry stain
IHC Helicobacter IHC
Site stomach

Associated Dx MALT lymphoma, gastric carcinoma, intestinal metaplasia of the stomach, peptic ulcer, duodenitis
Prevalence common
Endoscopy erythema
Prognosis benign
Clin. DDx normal stomach

Helicobacter gastritis, abbreviated HG, is a common form of gastritis caused by Helicobacter species.

The most common Helicobacter implicated is Helicobacter pylori, abbreviated HP.

General

  • Several Helicobacter species can cause gastritis:

Epidemiologic associations - Helicobacter infections are associated with:[1]

Gross

  • Thickened gastric folds.
  • Erythema.

Microscopic

Features:

  • Helicobacter organisms - key feature.
    • Helicobacter pylori:
      • Usually have v-shape (seagull-like shape).
        • May have a curved shape (comma-like shape) or U-shape.[2]
    • Helicobacter heilmannii:[3]
      • Corkscrew appearance.
  • Inflammation - usually moderate chronic active.

Tips:

  1. One needs to look at 400x magnification. Even at 400x they are possible to miss.
    • Helicobacter are damn small. They are smaller than the nucleus of the gastric foveollar cell.
  2. Look for mucus - they preferentially reside there.
    • This is usually close to the opening of the gastric pits.
  3. Helicobacter are found in groups. When you see several that are the same size and shape you can be sure they are real.

Notes:

  • Helicobacter can be in antrum and/or body.[4]
  • Helicobacter don't like the intestinal mucosa or mucosa that has undergone intestinal metaplasia; you're less likely to find 'em adjacent to it. In general, Helicobacter is uncommon in the context of a case with IM... but common enough that one still ought to look for it.
  • May be associated with G-cell hyperplasia.[5]

DDx:

  • Dirt - material has a variable size.
  • Contamination from oropharynx - bacilli straight, not associated with gastric mucosa.
  • Chronic gastritis.

Images

www:

Stains

IHC

  • Helicobacter pylori IHC stain +ve.

Note:

  • Reportly also stains Helicobacter heilmannii.[3]

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Body

STOMACH, BIOPSY:
- BODY-TYPE MUCOSA WITH MODERATE CHRONIC ACTIVE GASTRITIS.
- ABUNDANT HELICOBACTER-LIKE ORGANISMS PRESENT.
- NEGATIVE FOR INTESTINAL METAPLASIA.
- NEGATIVE FOR DYSPLASIA AND NEGATIVE FOR MALIGNANCY.

Antrum

STOMACH, BIOPSY:
- ANTRAL-TYPE MUCOSA WITH MODERATE CHRONIC ACTIVE GASTRITIS.
- ABUNDANT HELICOBACTER-LIKE ORGANISMS PRESENT.
- NEGATIVE FOR INTESTINAL METAPLASIA.
- NEGATIVE FOR DYSPLASIA AND NEGATIVE FOR MALIGNANCY.

Micro

The sections show antral-type gastric mucosa with abundant lamina propria plasma cells and focal intraepithelial neutrophils. Cocci and bacilli are present. Some of the bacilli are Helicobactor-like. The epithelium matures normally to the surface. No goblet cells are identified.

See also

References

  1. Cotran, Ramzi S.; Kumar, Vinay; Fausto, Nelson; Nelso Fausto; Robbins, Stanley L.; Abbas, Abul K. (2005). Robbins and Cotran pathologic basis of disease (7th ed.). St. Louis, Mo: Elsevier Saunders. pp. 814. ISBN 0-7216-0187-1.
  2. Mobley, HLT.; Mendz, GL.; Hazell, SL.; Andersen, LP.; Wadström, T.. Basic Bacteriology and Culture. PMID 21290743. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK2444/.
  3. 3.0 3.1 Singhal, AV.; Sepulveda, AR. (Nov 2005). "Helicobacter heilmannii gastritis: a case study with review of literature.". Am J Surg Pathol 29 (11): 1537-9. PMID 16224223.
  4. Maaroos HI, Kekki M, Villako K, Sipponen P, Tamm A, Sadeniemi L (October 1990). "The occurrence and extent of Helicobacter pylori colonization and antral and body gastritis profiles in an Estonian population sample". Scand. J. Gastroenterol. 25 (10): 1010-7. PMID 2263873.
  5. Kwan, CP.; Tytgat, GN. (Nov 1995). "Antral G-cell hyperplasia: a vanishing disease?". Eur J Gastroenterol Hepatol 7 (11): 1099-1103. PMID 8680911.
  6. URL: http://gut.bmj.com/content/58/12/1669.extract. Accessed on: 2 March 2012.