Helicobacter Pylori: Dr. Chairul Sandro
Helicobacter Pylori: Dr. Chairul Sandro
Helicobacter Pylori: Dr. Chairul Sandro
1
HISTORY OF H. PYLORI
• 1890’s: Spirochetes in animal stomachs
• 1900’s: Spirochetes in human stomachs
• 1954: No bacteria in gastric biopsies of 1000 patients
• 1975: Gram negative bacteria in 80% of GU’s
(Pseudomonas)
• 1983: Warren and Marshall characterize H. pylori
• 2005 Nobel prize in 2005
HELICOBACTER PYLORI
Background
DR.T.V.RAO MD 4
WARREN AND MARSHAL WINS
NOBEL PRIZE
DR.T.V.RAO MD 5
GENERAL CHARACTERISTICS OF
HELICOBACTER
• Helicobacter pylori is major human pathogen associated with
gastric antral epithelium in patients with active chronic gastritis
• Stomach of many animal species also colonized
• Urease (gastric strains only), mucinase, and catalase positive
highly motile microorganisms
• Other Helicobacters: H. cinnaedi and H. fenneliae
• Colonize human intestinal tract
• Isolated from homosexual men with proctitis, proctocolitis,
enteritis, and bacteremia and are often transmitted through
sexual practices
DR.T.V.RAO MD 6
A silver stain of H. pylori on gastric mucus-
secreting epithelial cells (x1000).
From Dr. Marshall's stomach biopsy taken 8 days
after he drank a culture of H. pylori (1985).
DR.T.V.RAO MD 7
HELICOBACTER PYLORI
DR.T.V.RAO MD 12
CULTURING AND BIOCHEMICAL
CHARACTERS
• Grows on chocolate agar, Campylobacter media
• Grows under Microaerophilic conditions
• With presence of 5 – 20% co2
• Oxidase +
• Catalase –
• Urease strongly +++
• H2S
DR.T.V.RAO MD 13
H. PYLORI PATHOGENESIS
BACTERIAL VIRULENCE FACTORS
(CAG- PAI)( 37000 B-P – 29 GENES)
2 Binding
3 Insertion
DR.T.V.RAO MD 19
Pathogenesis of Helicobacter Infections
Colonize mucosal lining of stomach & duodenum in
man & animals
• Adherent to gastric surface epithelium or pit epithelial
cells deep within the mucosal crypts adjacent to gastric
mucosal cells
• Mucosa protects the stomach wall from its own gastric
milleu of digestive enzymes and hydrochloric acid
• Mucosa also protects Helicobacter from immune
response
Most gastric adenocarcinomas and lymphomas are
concurrent with or preceded by an infection with H.
pylori
H.PYLORI INFECTING MUCOSAL
LAYER
DR.T.V.RAO MD 21
PATHOGENESIS OF H.PYLORI.
DR.T.V.RAO MD 22
Virulence Factors of Helicobacter
Multiple polar, sheathed flagella
• Corkscrew motility enables penetration into viscous
environment (mucus)
Adhesins: Hemagglutinins; Sialic acid binding
adhesin; Lewis blood group adhesin
Mucinase: Degrades gastric mucus; Localized
tissue damage
Urease converts urea (abundant in saliva and
gastric juices) into bicarbonate (to CO2) and
ammonia
• Neutralize the local acid environment
• Localized tissue damage
Acid-inhibitory protein
H. Pylori Specific T Cell and B Cell Responses
MECHANISM OF H.PYLORI INFECTION
DR.T.V.RAO MD 25
Urea Hydrolysis
Urease
C=O(NH2)2 + H+ + 2H2O HCO3- + 2 (NH4+)
Urea Bicarbonate Ammonium
ions
And then… HCO3-
CO2 + OH-
Virulence Factors of Helicobacter )
Tissue damage:
Vacuolating cytotoxin: Epithelial cell damage
Invasin(s)(??): Poorly defined (e.g., hemolysins;
phospholipases; alcohol dehydrogenase)
Protection from phagocytosis & intracellular killing:
Superoxide dismutase
Catalase
H. Pylori Pathogenesis and Application of
Cutting Edge Technologies
DR.T.V.RAO MD 32
Laboratory Identification
Recovered from or detected in endoscopic antral
gastric biopsy material; Multiple biopsies are taken
Many different transport media
Culture media containing whole or lysed blood
Microaerophilic
Grow well at 37oC, but not at 25 nor 42oC
Like Campylobacter, does not use carbohydrates,
neither fermentatively nor oxidatively
DIAGNOSIS BY NON INVASIVE
METHODS
• Serology ELISA
• Urea breath test patient
swallows urea solution
In this test patient drinks
urea solutions labeled with
an isotope carbon
If H.pylori is present in the
urea is converted to
ammonia and co2 in the
breath measured.
DR.T.V.RAO MD 34
SUGGESTED GUIDELINES FOR
TREATMENT OF PATIENTS WITH GI OR ULCER
DISEASE
Eradication
therapy
Confirmation of cure
DR.T.V.RAO MD 37
EMERGING DRUG RESISTANCE IN H.PYLORI
• Antibiotic treatment does not always
completely inhibit or kill H. pylori
with potential for antibiotic
resistance. Resistance to antibiotics
is the single most important factor
for declining H. pylori eradication
rates.
• In Japan, resistance to antibiotic
drugs has increased 400% while in
Taiwan, it is 500%. This means that
those who are infected while in
these countries may find the
bacterium rather resistant to their
antibiotic treatments.
DR.T.V.RAO MD 38
EPIDEMIOLOGY OF HELICOBACTER INFECTIONS
• Developed Countries:
• United States: 30% of total population infected
• Of those, ~1% per year develop duodenal ulcer
• ~1/3 eventually have peptic ulcer disease(PUD)
• 70% gastric ulcer cases colonized with H. pylori
• Low socioeconomic status predicts H. pylori infection
• Developing Countries:
• Hyperendemic
• About 10% acquisition rate per year for children between 2 and 8 years
of age
• Most adults infected but no disease
• Protective immunity from multiple childhood infections
DR.T.V.RAO MD 39
H.PYLORI CONTINUES TO BE AN
IMPORTANT PATHOGEN