Why do we still have Helicobacter Pylori in our Stomachs?
- Author:
Amin Talebi Bezmin Abadi
;
Enzo Ierardi
;
Yeong Yeh Lee
- Publication Type:Journal Article
- Keywords:
Helicobacter pylori;
survival;
elimination;
gastric cancer;
peptic ulcer disease;
stomach
- From:Malaysian Journal of Medical Sciences
2015;22(5):70-75
- CountryMalaysia
- Language:English
-
Abstract:
The existence of any infectious agent in a highly acidic human stomach is contentious, but
the chance finding of Helicobacter pylori is by no means an accident. Once H. pylori colonises the
gastric mucosa, it can persist for a lifetime, and it is intriguing why our immune system is able to
tolerate its existence. Some conditions favour the persistence of H. pylori in the stomach, but other
conditions oppose the colonisation of this bacterium. Populations with high and extremely low
prevalence of H. pylori provide useful insights on the clinical outcomes that are associated with this
type of infection. Adverse clinical outcomes including peptic ulcer disease and gastric cancer depend
on a delicate balance between a harmless inflammation and a more severe kind of inflammation. Is
the only good H. pylori really a dead H. pylori? The jury is still out.
- Full text:P020150907368361217849.pdf