Gastric injury and invasion of parietal cells by spiral bacteria in rhesus monkeys

Autor: Dubois, Andre, Tarnawski, Andrzej, Newell, Diane G., Fiala, Nancy, Dabros, Wojciech, Stachura, Jersey, Krivan, Howard, Heman-Ackah, Lillie M.
Zdroj: Gastroenterology; April 1991, Vol. 100 Issue: 4 p884-891, 8p
Abstrakt: The possibility of using the rhesus monkey as a model for studying gastric function in the presence of infection with spiral bacteria was studied. Endoscopic evaluation of the gastric mucosa was performed under general anesthesia in 29 colony-bred rhesus monkeys, and gastric pinch biopsy specimens were obtained from each animal. On a separate day, gastric emptying and acid output were determined using a 99mTc dilution technique. Biopsy samples were fixed for light microscopy (H&E, Gram, and Warthin-Starry stains) and for transmission electron microscopy. The presence of spiral bacteria and gastritis was assessed and rated on coded slides. In 8 of 29 monkeys, Helicobacter pylori-like organisms were observed in close proximity to the mucosal epithelial cells or in the lumen of the gastric pits. In 14 other monkeys, “Gastrospirillum hominis”-like organisms were observed in the mucus covering the surface of epithelial cells, in the lumina of the gastric glands, and overlying parietal cells. Gastritis was present in 8 of 8 animals positive for H. Pylori-like organisms, in 2 of 14 animals positive for “G. hominis”-like organisms, and in none of the uninfected monkeys, and the mean gastritis index was significantly greater in animals positive for H. pylori-like organisms. Moreover, acid output was significantly higher in monkeys positive for “G. hominis”-like organisms than in controls or animale positive for H. pylori-like organisms. Gastric emptying was not significantly different in the three groups. In conclusion, (a) H. pylori- like, but not “G. hominis”-like, organisms cause gastritis while not modifying acid output; (b) “G. hominis”-like, but not H. pylori-like organism, invade and occasion damage parietal cells while apparently causing hyperchlorhydria; and (c) the rehesus monkey appears to be a good model for the study of gastric infection with spiral bacteria.
Databáze: Supplemental Index