Orientador: Maria Aparecida Marchesan Rodrigues / Banca: Gisela Alborghetti Nai / Banca: Francisco de Agostinho Júnior / Resumo: Objetivo: Investigar através de estudo observacional, se o uso de características clínicas detalhadas de crianças e adolescentes com dor abdominal crônica (DAC) e dispepsia não ulcerosa possa auxiliar na identificação de pacientes infectados pelo Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori). Casuística e Métodos: Foi investigado um total de 721 novos casos consecutivos de crianças e adolescentes com DAC, destes foram incluídos no estudo 240 pacientes com critérios clínicos para dispepsia não ulcerosa e sugestiva de doença orgânica. Os dados foram colhidos utilizando protocolos clínicos, laboratoriais, endoscópicos e histopatológicos padronizados. Resultados: Foram identificadas 123 crianças infectadas pelo H. pylori, sendo 76 com pangastrite (61,7%) e 47 com gastrite antral (38,3%). Crianças com pangastrite apresentaram tempo de evolução da dor maior de 12 meses significantemente mais frequente do que aquelas com gastrite antral (p<0,05). Os sintomas dispépticos não diferiram entre gastrite antral e pangastrite. Foi observada associação positiva entre infecção por H. pylori e náusea (p<0,05). O grupo de pacientes não infectados por H. pylori apresentou dor retroesternal mais frequentemente do que os pacientes infectados por H. pylori (p<0,05). Não houve associação entre as variáveis demográficas e infecção por H. pylori. Conclusões: A prevalência de infecção por H. pylori foi alta entre crianças dispépticas, mas pouco associada a sintomas gastrointestinais específicos / Abstract: Aims: To investigate if the use of refined clinical characteristics of chronic abdominal pain can identify patients for further investigation of Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) infection. An observational study on children and adolescents with chronic non-ulcer dyspepsia was performed to investigate the potential association between specific gastrointestinal symptoms and H. pylori infection. The hypothesis was that the use of demographics and clinical data with defined criteria for chronic abdominal pain (CAP) and dyspeptic syndrome, could be of help in identifying patients with H. pylori infection. Methods: A cohort of 721 consecutive new cases of children and adolescents with CAP were investigated. Of them, 240 with clinical criteria for chronic non-ulcer dyspeptic syndrome and suggestive of organic underlying disease were enrolled into the study. Data were collected by using standardized demographic, clinical laboratory, endoscopic and histopathological protocols. Results: H. pylori infection was identified in 123 children (52%), being 76 with pangastritis (61.7%) and 47 with antral gastritis (38.3%). Symptoms duration longer than 12 months was significantly more frequent in children with pangastritis than in those with antral gastritis (p< 0.05). Dyspeptic symptoms did not differ between antral predominant and pangastritis. A significant association was observed between nausea and H. pylori infection (p<0.03). Retrosternal pain was significantly more frequent in the non-infected group (p<0.05) than in patients with H. pylori infection. No association between demographic variables and H. pylori infection was found. Conclusions: The prevalence of H. pylori infection was high among children with dyspepsia, but poorly associated with specific gastrointestinal symptoms / Mestre
Identifer | oai:union.ndltd.org:UNESP/oai:www.athena.biblioteca.unesp.br:UEP01-000795830 |
Date | January 2014 |
Creators | Silva, Renato Guilherme Silveira Corrêa. |
Contributors | Universidade Estadual Paulista "Júlio de Mesquita Filho" Faculdade de Medicina. |
Publisher | Botucatu, |
Source Sets | Universidade Estadual Paulista |
Language | Portuguese, Portuguese |
Detected Language | English |
Type | text |
Format | 58 f. |
Relation | Sistema requerido: Adobe Acrobat Reader |
Page generated in 0.002 seconds