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Artigo | IMSEAR | ID: sea-188197

RESUMO

ackground: There are a number of lesions that could affect the stomach varying from dyspepsia to highly lethal cancers; that can be chronic and incapacitating or merely an occasional discomfort or asymptomatic. Objective: The study was done to establish a correlation between endoscopic findings and histopathological characteristics of the various pathological gastric lesions. Methods: The study was a prospective study and done on 150 affected patients in 2 years. The endoscopic biopsy was taken from number of points of suspicious lesion for histopathologic diagnosis of the type of gastric lesions. The biopsies were fixed in formalin and adequately processed. The sections were stained with routine Haematoxylin and Eosin stain. Giemsa staining for H.pylori was also done. Results: In this study the most common clinical indications for endoscopic biopsy were pain epigastrium (82.0%) and dyspepsia (67.3%) with mean age of 54.25 and male predominance (1.9:1). The various gastric lesions were chronic gastritis (66.0%), adenocarcinoma (8.0%), no specific diagnosis (8.0%), dysplasia (4.7%), hyperplastic polyp (4.7%), acute on chronic gastritis (3.3%), eosinophilic gastritis (2.0%), acute gastritis (1.3%), intestinal metaplasia (1.3%) and chronic atrophic gastritis (0.7%). Conclusion: H. pylori is most commonly associated with acute on chronic gastritis.

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