Treatment of gastric and duodenal ulcers Flashcards

1
Q

What is the underlying pathology of peptic ulcers?

A

Helicobacter pylori: increase gastric acid formation; gastric metaplasia; decrease defence factors

Proton pump: H+ secretion - activated by increased Ca2+ and increased cAMP

Histamine released from epithelial cell layer cells act on H3 receptors - increased cAMP

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2
Q

How does Helicobacter pylori cause peptic ulcers?

A
  • Dissolves mucus layer on top of the epithelial cells: urease enzyme
  • Causes epithelial cell death: exotoxins and inflammation
    Increased acidity –> peptic ulcer

Ulcer formation:

  • Increased gastric acid formation = increased acidity – increased gastrin and decreased somatostatin
  • Gastric metaplasia – cell transformation due to excessive acid exposure. Destroys epithelium
  • Downregulation of defence factors - decrease in epidermal growth factor (responsible for the production of epithelial cells) and decrease in bicarbonate production (counteracts acidity)
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3
Q

Describe the virulence of H pylori

A

Urease – catalyses urea into ammonium chloride and monochloramine –> Toxic –> damage epithelial cells

Urease – antigenic –> evokes immune response which also causes damage to the epithelial cells

Certain virulent strains produce CagA (antigenic) or VacA (cytotoxic) – more intense tissue inflammation. Increases virulence

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4
Q

How do you treat peptic ulcers caused by H pylori?

A

Antibiotics (treat the underlying cause)- Amoxicillin and Clarithromycin/Metronidazole

Proton Pump Inhibitor (PPI) (treats the symptoms) – reduces acid production: Omeprazole (4-12 weeks)

Consider quinolone, tetracycline

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5
Q

Describe proton pumps and how they lead to ulcer formation

A

H+K+ATPase (proton pump):
Expressed on secretory vesicles within parietal cells
increased [Ca2+]i –> increased cAMP –> translocation of secretory vesicles to parietal cell apical surface –> H+ secretion. So normally the proton pump is not on the apical membrane.

H+ is removed from the cell and K+ is taken into the cell.

Increased activity of proton pump – increased H+ secretion –> reduction gastric pH

Activated by increased Ca2+ and cAMP

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6
Q

Describe gastric acid regulation

A

4 main types of receptors which play a role in acid production. REMEMBER: increased [Ca2+]i –> increased cAMP –> translocation of secretory vesicles to parietal cell apical surface –> H+ secretion.

  • Acetylcholine (ACh) released from neurones (vagus / enteric) acts on muscarinic (M3) receptors - increased [Ca2+]i
  • Prostaglandins (PGs) released from local cells act on EP3 receptors - increased cAMP
  • Histamine released from enterochromaffin-like cells (ECL) act on H2 receptors - increased cAMP
  • Gastrin released from blood stream acts on cholecystokinin B receptors - increased [Ca2+]i

Histamine activates H2 receptors which increase acid secretion.

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7
Q

How would you treat peptic ulcers caused by NSAIDs?

A
NSAID: primarily asprin use
 - Directly cytotoxic
 - Reduces mucus production 
 - Increases likelihood of bleeding
Increased acidity --> peptic ulcer 

Treatment:

  • Removal of NSAID
  • Proton Pump Inhibitor or histamine H2 receptor antagonist (Ranitidine) – 4-8 weeks
  • H2 receptor increases acid secretion
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8
Q

Explain why combination treatment is the current best practice?

A

You are targeting multiple pathways

1) proton pumps = reduce acid secretion
2) target the underlying cause –> Antibiotics or H. pylori

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