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1.
Background:  Helicobacter pylori infection is associated with severe gastrointestinal disease including cancer. It induces complex antibody responses that might vary depending on disease state but currently cannot be assessed adequately. The objective of this work was the development of a sensitive and specific H. pylori multiplex serology assay with high-throughput capability that allows simultaneous detection of antibodies to a protein array.
Methods:  Seventeen proteins of up to three H. pylori strains (26695, G27, 151), including CagA, VacA, UreA, Catalase, Omp, and GroEL, were recombinantly expressed as glutathione- S -transferase fusion proteins, affinity-purified, and used as antigens in a fluorescent bead-based antibody-binding assay. Reference sera (n   =   317) characterized by commercial assays (screening ELISA with Western blot confirmation) were used for validation.
Results:  H. pylori seropositivity by multiplex serology defined as reactivity with at least four proteins showed good agreement (kappa: 0.70) with commercial serologic assay classification, and a sensitivity of 89% and specificity of 82%. For individual antigens, agreement with Western blot was good for CagA (kappa: 0.77), moderate for UreA (kappa: 0.53), and weak for VacA (kappa: 0.12). Of the 13 proteins expressed from two strains, only VacA showed serologic strain differences. High antibody reactivity to CagA (Type I infection) was negatively associated with antibodies to GroEL, Cad, CagM, catalase, HcpC, NapA, and UreA, suggesting type-specific differences in protein expression patterns and/or immune response.
Conclusion:  With its high-throughput and simultaneous detection abilities, H. pylori multiplex serology appears suited as tool for large seroepidemiologic studies assessing H. pylori prevalence, antibody patterns, and associations with specific diseases.  相似文献   

2.
Background. Limited data are available on the prevalence of CagA and VacA Helicobacter pylori antibodies in children. The aim of this study was to investigate the antibody prevalence to the H. pylori virulence factors CagA and VacA in symptomatic and asymptomatic children with H. pylori infection and to correlate these antibodies with the severity of gastric inflammation or density of H. pylori organisms in the gastric mucosa.
Materials and Methods. Twenty-three symptomatic children and 132 asymptomatic children with positive H. pylori serology participated in this study. Anti– H. pylori IgG antibody and CagA or VacA H. pylori antibodies were measured by enzyme immunoassay (HM-CAP; sensitivity and specificity> 90%) and Western immunoblot (Helicoblot 2.0) methods, respectively. Gastric inflammation and H. pylori density were graded histologically using the revised Sydney criteria.
Results. The prevalence of CagA and VacA antibodies were 69% and 35% in symptomatic children and 54% and 52% in asymptomatic children, respectively. Multiple regression analysis showed a correlation between CagA antibody and the severity of gastritis but no correlation with other histological features, including the number of neutrophils or lymphoid follicles. Neither antibody correlated with the degree of bacterial density in the gastric mucosa.
Conclusion. CagA and VacA H. pylori antibodies are common in the pediatric population. The combined CagA/VacA antibodies correlated weakly with the degree of mucosal inflammation.  相似文献   

3.
Helicobacter pylori is a major factor for the development of gastric cancer. The aim of this study was to define serum antibody patterns associated with H. pylori infection in patients with gastric cancer using a Western blot technique. Serum samples collected from 115 patients with gastric cancer and 110 age- and gender-matched patients without gastrointestinal diseases were tested for IgG antibodies to H. pylori antigens (outer membrane proteins and whole cell preparations). No significant differences were found between patients with and without gastric cancer using outer membrane proteins (82% and 73%, P>0.05) or whole cell antigens (84% and 76%, P>0.05), respectively. The significant differences between patients with and without gastric cancer were associated with bands of 94 kDa (54% and 20%, P<0.001) and 30 kDa (65% and 44%, P<0.01). A combination of antibodies to 85 kDa (VacA) and 120 kDa (CagA) was significantly (P<0.01) more frequent in gastric cancer patients than in patients without gastric cancer. The detection of antibodies to 94- and 30-kDa bands, in association with the determination of serum antibodies to CagA+/VacA+, may have a prospective value in assessment of the risk of developing of gastric cancer.  相似文献   

4.
The effects of helminth infection on humoral IgG responses and clinical outcome of gastric Helicobacter pylori infection are unknown. IgG and IgG subclass responses to H. pylori and serum pepsinogen I/II ratio, a marker of gastric atrophy, were investigated in a Schistosoma japonicum prevalent Chinese population. H. pylori, CagA and IgG subclass responses were assayed by ELISA. Serum pepsinogen I and pepsinogen II were assayed by ELISA and the pepsinogen I/II ratio determined. In 150 subjects, infection with S. japonicum and H. pylori was 55.3% and 51.3%, respectively. H. pylori IgG titres and CagA seropositivity were significantly lower (P<0.05) in co-infected subjects, and differences in H. pylori IgG isotype responses were evident. In H. pylori positives, a significantly higher (P<0.05) pepsinogen I/II ratio was observed in co-infected subjects. The difference between S. japonicum positive and negative subjects was only evident in H. pylori CagA seronegative subjects. In conclusion, S. japonicum co-infection with H. pylori is associated with alterations in IgG responses to H. pylori and less gastric atrophy.  相似文献   

5.
BACKGROUND AND AIM: Atrophic body gastritis (ABG) may be induced by H. pylori infection. It is difficult to diagnose H. pylori infection in this condition, since during progression of body atrophy the bacterium disappears. In 30% of patients with ABG no sign of H. pylori infection is detectable. We aimed to investigate whether patients with ABG, classified as H. pylori-negative by conventional methods (ELISA serology and Giemsa stain histology), have been previously exposed to the infection. METHODS: Case series consisted of 138 outpatients with ABG, of whom 31 are H. pylori negative (histology and ELISA serology), and 107 are H. pylori related (histology and ELISA serology positive: active infection, n = 29; only serology positive: past infection, n = 78). Thirty control subjects who were H. pylori negative at histology and ELISA serology were investigated. Immunoblotting of sera against H. pylori whole-cell protein lysate was performed. RESULTS: None of the control sera recognized CagA, VacA, heat-shock protein B, and urease B, yielding a specificity of 100%. All H. pylori-negative patients with ABG showed immunoblotting seroreactivity, including in each case either CagA or VacA. The concomitant seroreactivity against CagA and VacA was highly prevalent in the H. pylori-negative patients with ABG, comparable to those with active infection (77.4% vs. 86.2%) and with past infection (vs. 61.5%). CONCLUSIONS: Immunoblotting against CagA and VacA is able to prove past exposure to H. pylori infection in all patients with ABG defined as H. pylori-negative by conventional methods, suggesting a hidden role of H. pylori infection in gastric atrophy also in these patients.  相似文献   

6.
We have cloned and sequenced ten Helicobacter pylori genes from a Chilean strain (CH-CTX1) including: a cytotoxin VacA fragment, a CagA fragment (A17), a species-specific protein (TsaA), urease subunits (UreA, UreB), a flagellin subunit (FlaB), heat shock proteins (HspA and HspB), adhesin (HpaA) and a lipoprotein (Lpp20). We compared their deduced amino acid sequences with the corresponding sequences from three unrelated H. pylori strains, including fully sequenced strains 26695(UK) and J99(USA), and found that eight of them (UreA, UreB, FlaB, HspA, HspB, Lpp20, TsaA and HpaA) presented more than 97.3% identity. In contrast, VacA partial sequence showed lower identity values (93.2-94.9%). Moreover, we found major differences in the A17 region respect to the number and arrangement of the internal repeated elements when sequences from different strains were aligned. The A17 regions from strains CH-CTX1 and 26695 are very similar (91.8% identity) but lacked 6 repeated elements when compared to the Australian strains ATCC 43526 and NCTC 11637. The CCUG 17874 A17 region showed the largest deletion involving 9 repeats. A17 size differences between strains CCUG 17874 and CH-CTX1 were verified by PCR and polypeptide size. Such differences may explain variations in virulence among H. pylori strains as well as diversity in serum immunoreactivity.  相似文献   

7.
The pathogenicity of chronic gastroduodenal diseases is very often related to Helicobacter pylori infections. Most H. pylori strains carry the cagA gene encoding an immunodominant 120- to 128-kDa protein which is considered a virulence marker. The majority of CagA-positive H. pylori isolates also produce a 95-kDa protein cytotoxin (VacA) causing vacuolation and degradation of mammalian cells. In our previous study we have shown that live H. pylori bacteria and their sonicates inhibit PHA-driven proliferation of human T lymphocytes. The H. pylori CagA and VacA proteins were suspected of a paralyzing effect of H. pylori on T cell proliferation. In this report, by using isogenic H. pylori mutant strains defective in CagA and VacA proteins, we determined that CagA is responsible for the inhibition of PHA-induced proliferation of T cells.  相似文献   

8.
Background. The aim of this study was to assess the seroprevalence of cytotoxin-associated gene A ( cag A) and vacuolating cytotoxin gene A ( vac A) of Helicobacter pylori in selected Thai populations with specific gastroduodenal diseases.
Materials and Methods. The immunoblot assay was used to detect serum antibodies against CagA and VacA obtained from the following patients: 87 cases of nonulcer dyspepsia (NUD), 61 cases of duodenal ulcer (DU), 49 cases of gastric ulcer (GU), and 10 cases of gastric cancer (GC).
Results. Serum antibodies to CagA were detected in 75.4% of all patients (70.1% of NUD, 78.7% of DU, 77.6% of GU, and 90% of GC). Although the prevalence of CagA seropositivity in GC patients was higher than in the other three groups, the difference was not statistically significant ( p > .05).
Conclusions. The high seroprevalence of the CagA-positive H. pylori strain in patients with peptic ulcer, GC, and NUD indicates that this strain is common in Thai patients with gastroduodenal diseases. Furthermore, phenotypic classification of H. pylori into type 1 (CagA-positive, VacA-positive) and type 2 (CagA-negative, VacA-negative) is not a useful marker for screening patients with severe forms of gastroduodenal diseases.  相似文献   

9.
Helicobacter pylori is an important risk factor of duodenal ulcer (DU). Although many virulence factors of H. pylori have been identified, few have been reported to show an association with the pathogenesis of DU. The aims of this study were to identify H. pylori antigens showing a high seropositivity in DU and to develop a platform for rapid and easy diagnosis for DU. Because DU and gastric cancer (GC) are considered clinical divergent gastroduodenal diseases, we compared two-dimensional immunoblots of an acid-glycine extract of an H. pylori strain from a patient with DU probed with serum samples from 10 patients with DU and 10 with GC to identify DU-related antigens. Of the 11 proteins that were strongly recognized by serum IgG from DU patients, translation elongation factor EF-G (FusA), catalase (KatA), and urease alpha subunit (UreA) were identified as DU-related antigens, showing a higher seropositivity in DU samples (n = 124) than in GC samples (n = 95) (FusA, 70.2 versus 45.3%; KatA, 50.8 versus 41.1%; UreA, 44.4 versus 27.4%). In addition, we found that the use of multiple antigens improved the discrimination between patients with DU and those with GC as the odds ratios increased from 1.82 (95% confidence interval (CI), 0.79-4.21; p = 0.1607) for seropositivity for FusA, KatA, or UreA alone to 4.95 (95% CI, 2.05-12.0; p = 0.0004) for two of the three antigens and to 5.71 (95% CI, 1.86-17.6; p = 0.0024) for all three antigens. Moreover a protein array containing the three DU-related antigens was developed to test the idea of using multiple biomarkers in diagnosis. We conclude that FusA, KatA, and UreA are DU-related antigens of H. pylori, and the combination of these on a protein array provided a rapid and convenient method for detecting serum antibody patterns of DU patients.  相似文献   

10.
To develop a specific line blot (LB) for supporting ELISA-based serodiagnosis of Helicobacter pylori infection, individual native/recombinant H. pylori antigens were evaluated with respect to their reactivity with both serum IgG and IgA from 156 dyspeptic screening patients (67% H. pylori positive). Of 13 antigens, HP0175, p17, and p19 revealed highest positive likelihood ratios for H. pylori-specific IgG (> 5.0) and were selected as LB substrates, in addition to the established virulence markers VacA and CagA. For validation, the LB was compared to a commercial whole-cell-lysate-based ELISA by parallel (re-)analysis of 156 screening sera, 22 sera from diabetes mellitus patients and 15 sera from follow-up patients after H. pylori eradication. In screening patients, the combined use of IgG ELISA and LB revealed a sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy of 94%, 81%, and 90%, respectively, whereas IgG ELISA alone exhibited a low specificity of 75%. In diabetic and follow-up patients, IgA ELISA exhibited high accuracy of 89% and 93%, respectively, whereas IgG detection was unreliable (accuracy < 80%). In conclusion, using HP0175, p17, p19, CagA, and VacA as LB substrates significantly improves the specificity of anti-H. pylori IgG analysis, providing a reliable tool for (1) confirmation/refutation of ELISA-based screening results and (2) assessment of the CagA/VacA status.  相似文献   

11.
12.
The cagA gene, vacA gene, CagA (cytotoxin-associated gene A product) and VacA (vacuolating cytotoxin) status of a collection of Helicobacter pylori isolates from the geographically distinct Irish population was determined, the potential association of these traits with Lewis (Le) antigen expression was assessed, and the relationship between these bacterial properties and the pathology associated with H. pylori infection was evaluated. Of the 57 isolates, a higher proportion from ulcer than from non-ulcer patients expressed VacA (71% vs. 53%). H. pylori isolates which were cagA-positive were no more significantly associated with peptic ulcers than non-ulcer disease (71% vs. 67%, P = 0.775), nor were CagA-positive isolates (57% vs. 50%, P = 0.783), but 80% of the isolates from duodenal ulcer patients were cagA-positive. Thirty-seven of the 57 isolates were tested for Le antigen expression. No statistically significant relationship (P > 0.05) was found between the occurrence and level of expression of Le(x) or Le(y) and cagA, vacA, or VacA status. This lack of an association in the Irish H. pylori isolates contrasts with that previously reported for predominantly North American isolates, and may be attributable to the adaptation of H. pylori strains with differing attributes to different human populations.  相似文献   

13.
Helicobacter pylori vacuolating toxin (VacA) appears to be unusually stable, not only against extreme pH conditions or high temperatures, but also against common organic solvents or detergents. Under acidic conditions, its activity was markedly increased in the manner of temperature-independent, suggesting a spontaneous activation. A similar finding was also observed under alkaline conditions, however, it should have an appropriate temperature. From these observations, the mechanisms of VacA activation were suggested to be so redundant that either the case of acidic or basic amino acid residues could be involved in the VacA activation. Separately, we also found that the VacA production by H. pylori was pH-dependent: Its production was increased at a low pH region with a broad range (1.0-5.0), and at a high pH region with a narrow range (8.0-9.0). Astonishingly, a highly immunogenic CagA did not appear to be expressed under the acidic conditions. Its expression, however, was shown to be enhanced when the surrounding pH of this bacterium was raised. In contrast, mucoproteolytic activity in the H. pylori membrane was found to be increased at acidic conditions. Considering these observations, together with the stomach and duodenal pH of humans, two presumptive mechanisms of H. pylori VacA-associated ulceration may be deduced; namely, an acid- and an alkali-dependent type, involving mucoprotease and CagA, respectively.  相似文献   

14.
Two major markers of virulence have been described in H. pylori. The first is a secreted protein (VacA) that is toxic to human cells in tissue culture. This cytotoxin causes vacuolation of epithelial cells in vitro and induces epithelial cell damage in mice. The second is a 40-Kb pathogenicity island for which the gene cagA (cytotoxin-associated gene A) is a marker. Approximately 60% of H. pylori isolates in Western countries are cagA+. The protein encoded by cagA+ has a molecular weight of 120-140 kDa and exhibits sequence heterogeneity among strains isolated from Western and Eastern countries. Although no specific function has been identified for CagA, there is increasing evidence that cagA+ strains are associated with increased intensity of gastric inflammation and increased mucosal concentration of particular cytokines including interleukin 8. Inactivation of picB (Hp 0544) or any of several other genes in the cag island ablates the enhanced IL-8 secretion of human gastric epithelial cells in tissue culture. Furthermore, persons colonized with cagA+ strains have an increased risk of developing more severe gastric diseases such as peptic ulcer and distal (non-cardia) gastric cancer than those harboring cagA- strains. We investigated the role of cagA status in both gastroduodenal and extragastroduodenal disease with H. pylori. Among the diseases limited to the antrum and body of the stomach and the duodenum, we demonstrated a correlation between CagA seropositivity and peptic ulcer disease. We also showed correlation between distal gastric cancer rated and CagA prevalence in populations in both developed and developing countries. In addition, we found that for several Asian populations, the relationship between CagA seropositivity and gastroduodenal diseases was complex. For extragastroduodenal diseases, our results confirmed previous reports that demonstrated that CagA status did not play a role in diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis and hyperemesis gravidarum. However, we found a clear negative association between the presence of a positive response to CagA and esophageal diseases. Therefore, CagA seropositivity (and thus gastric carriage) is associated with increased risks of certain diseases (involving the lower stomach and duodenum) and decreased risks of GERD and its sequelae. This apparent paradox can best be explained by differences in the interaction of cagA+ and cagA- strains with their hosts.  相似文献   

15.
The clinical outcome of Helicobacter pylori infection is determined by a complex scenario of interactions between the bacterium and the host. The main bacterial factors associated with colonization and pathogenicity comprise outer membrane proteins including BabA, SabA, OipA, AlpA/B, as well as the virulence factors CagA in the cag pathogenicity island ( cag PAI) and the vacuolating cytotoxin VacA. The multitude of these proteins and allelic variation makes it extremely difficult to test the contribution of each individual factor. Much effort has been put into identifying the mechanism associated with H. pylori -associated carcinogenesis. Interaction between bacterial factors such as CagA and host signal transduction pathways seems to be critical for mediating the induction of membrane dynamics, actin-cytoskeletal rearrangements and the disruption of cell-to-cell junctions as well as proliferative, pro-inflammatory and antiapoptotic nuclear responses. An animal model using the Mongolian gerbil is a useful system to study the gastric pathology of H. pylori infection.  相似文献   

16.
ABSTRACT: BACKGROUND: Chronic gastritis, peptic ulcer disease, and gastric cancer have been shown to be related toinfection with Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori). Two major virulence factors of H. pylori,CagA and VacA, have been associated with these sequelae of the infection. In this study, totalDNA was isolated from gastric biopsy specimens to assess the cagA and vacA genotypes. RESULTS: Variations in H. pylori cagA EPIYA motifs and the mosaic structure of vacA s/m/i/dayregions were analysed in 155 H. pylori-positive gastric biopsies from 71 individuals usingPCR and sequencing. Analysis of a possible association between cagA and vacA genotypesand gastroduodenal pathogenesis was made by logistic regression analysis. We found that H. pylori strains with variation in the number of cagA EPIYA motif variants present in the samebiopsy correlated with peptic ulcer, while occurrence of two or more EPIYA-C motifs wasassociated with atrophy in the gastric mucosa. No statistically significant relation betweenvacA genotypes and gastroduodenal pathogenesis was observed. CONCLUSIONS: The results of this study indicate that cagA genotypes may be important determinants in thedevelopment of gastroduodenal sequelae of H. pylori infection. In contrast to other studies,vacA genotypes were not related to disease progression or outcome. In order to fullyunderstand the relations between cagA, vacA and gastroduodenal pathogenesis, themechanisms by which CagA and VacA act and interact need to be further investigated.  相似文献   

17.
AIM: Helicobacter pylori is known to enhance gastric carcinogenesis induced by chemical carcinogens. We previously demonstrated that infection with H. pylori strain SS1 did not enhance such carcinogenesis in C57BL/6 mice. Whether this result was due to the bacterial strain SS1 or to the experimental host, C57BL/6 mice, should be addressed. Therefore, we examined whether H. pylori strains introduced to the same host (Mongolian gerbils) differed in carcinogenicity. MATERIALS AND METHODS: H. pylori TN2GF4 strain (CagA(+), VacA(+)) and SS1 strain (CagA functionally(-), VacA(-)) were infected to Mongolian gerbils (n = 126). In the first experiment (induction of gastritis), histologic change in gastric mucosa of gerbils infected by H. pylori (TN2GF4, SS1, vehicle) without N-methyl-N-nitrosourea (MNU) at 1 month or 6 months was assessed. In the second experiment (experimental carcinogenesis), H. pylori (TN2GF4, SS1, vehicle) was inoculated to the gerbils after administration of MNU for 10 weeks, and the number of cancers and histopathologic changes at week 54 were assessed. RESULTS: In the first experiment, activity and inflammation in the TN2GF4 group were significantly greater than in the SS1 group at 1 month, while no significant difference was noted at 6 months. On the other hand, intestinal metaplasia and atrophy were significantly greater with TN2GF4 than with SS1 at 6 months but not at 1 month. In studies on experimental carcinogenesis, microscopically, 47.8% (11/23), 26% (7/26), and 0% (0/26), of animals had gastric adenocarcinoma in the MNU + TN2GF4 group, MNU + SS1 group, and MNU alone group, respectively. CONCLUSION: Both H. pylori strains, TN2GF4 and SS1, promoted carcinogenesis in Mongolian gerbils. The severity of gastritis and destruction and restoration of gastric mucosa may be related to gastric carcinogenesis. That the SS1 strain significantly accelerated carcinogenesis only in Mongolian gerbils and not in C57BL/6 mice suggests the crucial role of host factors in carcinogenesis by H. pylori infection.  相似文献   

18.
Secreted proteins are of general interest from the perspective of bacteria-host interaction. The gastric bacterial pathogen Helicobacter pylori uses a set of secreted and translocated proteins--including outer membrane adhesins, secreted extracellular enzymes and translocated effector proteins--to adapt to its extraordinary habitat, the gastric mucosa. Two major virulence factors of H. pylori are the vacuolating cytotoxin (VacA) and the cag type-IV secretion system and its translocated effector protein, cytotoxin-associated antigen A (CagA). VacA targets not only epithelial cells, but also cells of the immune system and induces immunosuppression. CagA has been shown to interact with a growing set of eucaryotic signaling molecules in phosphorylation-dependent and -independent ways.  相似文献   

19.
BACKGROUND: Georgia has showed a high prevalence of peptic ulcer disease (PUD), but the prevalence of Helicobacter pylori in this country is practically unknown. The purpose of this study was to determine the prevalence of H. pylori and specific genotypes in different populations in Georgia. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We studied 62 patients from several hospitals in Tbilisi, Georgia. More than 55% of patients had PUD. We determined H. pylori presence as well as specific genotypes cagA and vacA by polymerase chain reaction. In addition, we studied serum samples from 94 healthy persons to determine H. pylori and CagA prevalence by ELISA. RESULTS: We found a high prevalence of H. pylori and CagA in the healthy population (70.2 and 57.4%, respectively) and a high prevalence of CagA among the H. pylori-positive persons (71.2%). Prevalence increased with age as reported in other countries (p = .05). Among symptomatic persons, we found nearly the same high prevalence of H. pylori (64.5%) as in the asymptomatic population. Furthermore, in symptomatic H. pylori patients, we found 65.0 and 67.5% prevalence of cagA and vacA, respectively. For 33 patients with PUD, 24 patients (72.7%) were H. pylori positive and 66.7% of them were cagA positive. In contrast, among the patients with non-ulcer dyspepsia (NUD), 16 (55.2%) were H. pylori positive and 62.5% of them were colonized with cagA-positive strains. H. pylori and cagA prevalence were not significantly different between PUD and patients with NUD. CONCLUSIONS: We confirmed that among individuals in Georgia, the prevalence of H. pylori is high and cagA-positive strains were equally present among H. pylori-positive patients with PUD and NUD and asymptomatic persons.  相似文献   

20.
The prevalence of Helicobacter pylori is high in Eastern Europe. The purpose of this study was to estimate the prevalence of H. pylori in symptomatic Lithuanian children and to identify the infection by clinicopathological and serological analyses. One hundred sixteen symptomatic children (age 8-16) with gastritis and duodenal ulcer were included. Biopsies were histologically assessed according to the Sydney-System. Serum IgG antibodies against H. pylori were detected by an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), using low molecular mass antigen. The western blot technique was used to detect serum antibodies against the cytotoxin-associated protein (CagA) using whole cell antigen. Histologically the prevalence of H. pylori infection was 79% and not influenced by demographic factors. Mucosal inflammation and atrophy were associated with a H. pylori infection. Intestinal metaplasia was found in eight children, suggesting early H. pylori acquisition in life. Increased levels of IgG antibodies were detected in 57% of children. The prevalence of IgG antibodies was significantly higher in patients with duodenal ulcer compared to children with gastritis. Forty-four (67%) H. pylori-seropositive children had antibodies against CagA. Low molecular weight-ELISA and whole cell-western blot results were significantly associated with histopathology, the presence of duodenal ulcer and the CagA status. A high number of false seronegative cases were due to poor immunological responses in children and poor locally validated tests. The prevalence of H. pylori infection in Lithuanian children is higher compared to Western Europe. The infection is acquired in early life. Diagnosing H. pylori infection, serology is helpful, but endoscopy/histology remains as gold standard.  相似文献   

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