Peptic Ulcer Disease
Peptic Ulcer Disease
Peptic Ulcer Disease
Dr Amit Bhattarai
Consultant General &
Laparoscopic surgeon
Focal defects in the gastric or duodenal
mucosa or submucosa or deeper usually
5mm to 1cm
Imbalance between mucosal defenses and
acid peptic injury
Gastritis is the precursor to PUD and is
clinically difficult to differentiate the two
Lifetime prevalence=10% of Americans
develop PUD
10% of the ER patients with abdominal
pain diagnosed with PUD
Prevalence decreasing over last 30 yrs
Male to female ratio of gastritis =1:1
Male to female ratio of PUD= 2:1
Peak age 70yrs
Helicobacter pylori
NSAIDs
Smoking
Acid pepsin vs. mucosal resistance
Diet/other diseases/genetics/emotional
stress
ETIOLOGY
3 level barrier preepithelial, epithelial and
subepithelial elements
Helicobacter pylori
Produces alkaline environment enabling
the survival
Higher prevalence in lower socioeconomic
group
90% of the Du ulcers vs 70% of the
gastric ulcers +ve
Asymptomatic in approx.70% infected
Considered class I carcinogen---- gastric
Ca;gastric lymphoma
NATURAL HISTORY OF H PYLORI
Prostaglandins
-abundant in gastric mucosa
-play central role in epithelial
defense/repair
-regulate release of mucosal HCO3 and
mucus
-inhibit parietal cell secretion
-maintain mucosal blood flow
-epithelial cell restitution
4 times as common as gastric ulcers
Most common in the middle age (30-50 y)
Male to female ratio---5:1
Genetic link: 3 times common in 1st
degree
Blood group O
Increased serum pepsinogen
H pylori---upto 95%
Smoking twice as common
Duodenal ulcers
Common in late middle age(incidence
increases with age)
Male to female ratio---2:1
More common in blood group A
Use of NSAIDs– 3-4 times increased risk
H pylori---70%
10-20% harbouring concomitant Du ulcer
Gastric ulcers
Interplay between host and
bacterial factors
Causative in 30 % GU, less of DU
Interference with PG E levels –impaired
cyto protection
Increased risk of complications
NSAIDS
Increases Hcl output
Decreases PG levels
Decreases duodenopancreatic HCO3 levels
Increases duodenogastric reflux
Smoking
Curling ulcers: duodenal ulcers and /or
duodenitis in burn patients
Cushing’s ulcer: acute peptic ulceration in
patients with head injury
Stressful life events??
Use of crack cocaine: juxtapyloric ulcers
with propensity to perforate
Alcohol???
► Abdominal pain
► Typical pain pattern in DU occurs 90
min to 3 h after meal and is relieved
by antacids or food.
► Awakes the patient from sleep : the
most discriminating symptom( 2/3rd
of DU pt.)
► Unfortunately, this symptom also
present in 1/3rd of patients with
NUD.
Clinical Features: GU
Barium studies
Most sensitive and specific .
Direct visualization of the mucosa,
Biopsy to rule out malignancy or Hp.
Identifies lesions too small to detect by
Ba exam, for evaluation of atypical
radiographic abnormalities, or to
determine if an ulcer is a source of blood
loss.
Endoscopy
Test Sensitivity Comments
/
Tests for Detection of H. pylori
Specificity
,%
Invasive (Endoscopy/Biopsy Required)
Rapid urease 80– Simple, false negative with recent use
95/95– of PPIs, antibiotics, or bismuth
100 compounds
Histology 80–90/ provides histologic information
>95
Culture —/— Time-consuming, expensive ; antibiotic
susceptibility
Non-invasive
Serology >80/>90 Inexpensive, convenient; not useful for
early follow-up
Urea breath >90/>90 Simple, rapid; useful for early follow-
test up; false negatives with recent
therapy ; exposure to low-dose
radiation with 14C test
Management
► General measures
Stop smoking
Dietary modifications?
Treat/avoid stress
Peptic Ulcer Disease: Treatment
Drug Type/Mechanism Examples Dose
Acid-suppressing drugs
Antacids
H2 receptor antagonists Ranitidine 300 mg hs
Famotidine 40 mg hs
Nizatidine 300 mg hs
Proton pump inhibitors Omeprazole 20 mg/d
Lansoprazole 30 mg/d
Rabeprazole 20 mg/d
Pantoprazole 40 mg/d
Esomeprazole 20 mg/d
Mucosal protective agents
Sucralfate Sucralfate 1 g qid
Prostaglandin analogue Misoprostol 200 g qid
Bismuth-containing Bismuth subsalicylate
compounds (BSS)
Regimens for H. pylori
eradication
Drug Dose
Triple Therapy
1. Bismuth subsalicylate plus 2 tablets qid
Metronidazole plus 250 mg qid
Tetracyclinea 500 mg qid
2. Ranitidine bismuth citrate 400 mg bid
plus
Tetracycline plus 500 mg bid
Clarithromycin or 500 mg bid
metronidazole
3. Omeprazole (lansoprazole) 20 mg bid (30 mg bid)
plus
Clarithromycin plus 250 or 500 mg bid
Metronidazoleb or 500 mg bid
Regimens for H. pylori
eradication
Quadruple Therapy
Surgical management
Gastrointestinal bleeding:15%
Perforation/peritonitis: 7%
Gastric outlet obstruction: 1-2%
Gastric carcinoma
pyloroplasties
Low ulcer recurrence rate(<0.2%)
Useful for complicated ulcers
High operative mortality rate(1%)
Reconstruction with Billroth I or Billroth II
loop G-J
Avoided in hemodynamically unstable
patient,extensive inflammation and
scarring of the proximal duodenum
HSV+GJ Biopsy,HSV+GJ
Obstruction V+A Distal gastrectomy