Journal of Clinical Biochemistry and Nutrition
Online ISSN : 1880-5086
Print ISSN : 0912-0009
ISSN-L : 0912-0009
Original Articles
Background factors of idiopathic peptic ulcers and optimal treatment methods: a multicenter retrospective Japanese study
Noriyuki NakajimaToshihisa TakeuchiRyota HokariKazuyuki NarimatsuKatsunori IijimaShigeto KoizumiKunio KasugaiMasahide EbiAkihito NagaharaTsutomu TakedaToshihiko TomitaShinichiro ShinzakiKazuhiro MizukamiKazunari MurakamiNobuaki YagiRieko MukaiToshikatsu OkumuraHiroki TanabeKazuyuki TanakaJunichi IwamotoAtsushi IrisawaKoh FukushiHiromi KataokaHirotada NishieYasuhiro FujiwaraKoji OtaniOsamu HandaYasuhiko MaruyamaToshio UraokaHiroko HosakaTakahisa FurutaTomohisa TakagiMasakatsu NakamuraYuya NyumuraAkitoshi HakodaNoriaki SugawaraTaro IwatuboKazuhiro OtaShinpei KawaguchiKazuhide HiguchiHiroki Nishikawa
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Supplementary material

2024 Volume 74 Issue 1 Pages 82-89

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Abstract

This study investigated the trends in idiopathic peptic ulcers, examined the characteristics of refractory idiopathic peptic ulcer, and identified the optimal treatment. The characteristics of 309 patients with idiopathic peptic ulcer were examined. We allocated idiopathic peptic ulcers that did not heal after 8 weeks’ treatment (6 weeks for duodenal ulcers) to the refractory group and those that healed within this period to the healed group. The typical risk factors for idiopathic peptic ulcer (atherosclerosis-related underlying disease or liver cirrhosis complications) were absent in 46.6% of patients. Absence of gastric mucosal atrophy (refractory group: 51.4%, healed group: 28.4%; p = 0.016), and gastric fundic gland polyps (refractory group: 17.6%, healed group: 5.9%; p = 0.045) were significantly more common in the refractory group compared to the healed group. A history of H. pylori eradication (refractory group: 85.3%, healed group: 66.0%; p = 0.016), previous H. pylori infection (i.e., gastric mucosal atrophy or history of H. pylori eradication) (refractory group: 48.5%, healed group: 80.0%; p = 0.001), and potassium-competitive acid blocker treatment (refractory group: 28.6%, healed group, 64.1%; p = 0.001) were significantly more frequent in the healed group compared to the refractory group. Thus, acid hypersecretion may be a major factor underlying the refractoriness of idiopathic peptic ulcer.

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© 2024 JCBN

This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives License.
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
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