Cases reported "Achlorhydria"

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1/3. Symptomatic hypergastrinaemia with achlorhydria: reflief by antrectomy.

    A women had hypergastrinaemia associated with the variety of gastritis (Type A) that is associated usually with pernicious anaemia, together with recurring bouts of severe abdominal pain. fasting serum gastrin levels ranged between 600 and 2750 pg/ml. There was a rise in serum gastrin levels after a standard protein meal, indicative of a large G cell mass, and a fall after intragastric HCI, which led to a trial of treatment with HCI; this gave some symptomatic relief. After surgical antrectomy there was a profound fall of serum gastrin from a pre-operative level of 2500 pg/ml to constant values of 16--25 pg/ml, and complete and lasting relief from the bouts of abdominal pain.
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ranking = 1
keywords = anaemia
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2/3. Pernicious anaemia in Africans.

    Ten cases of pernicious anaemia seen over a 15-year period (1973-1988) in a Lagos hospital are presented. Their ages ranged from 34 to 67 with a mean of 53.6 years. Females outnumbered males 6 to 4. Complications seen include gastric carcinoma, myelopathy, peripheral neuropathy, skin hyperpigmentation, hair depigmentation and diarrhoea. Reluctance to consider the diagnosis owing to firmly held notions of its rarity and a penchant for empirically treating chronic anaemias with all available haematinics and blood transfusion are probably contributory to its underdiagnosis. The fact that seven of the patients presented were seen in the last three years and three of them in the last one year raises the possibility of an increasing incidence of pernicious anaemia in Africans. The disease may be much less rare in Africans than once believed, and medical education should emphasize its existence and advocate greater care in the management of chronic anaemias.
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ranking = 8
keywords = anaemia
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3/3. Multifocal gastric carcinoid tumours, achlorhydria, and hypergastrinaemia.

    Multiple polypoidal carcinoid tumours of the stomach were found in 5 patients with achlorhydria (4 of whom had pernicious anaemia) as a result of autoimmune atrophic gastritis. The tumours were small (nearly all less than 1 cm diameter) and appeared to grow very slowly, if at all; no significant enlargement or complications were seen during periods of observation of up to 6 years. No extragastric hormonal syndromes were identified. They differed from the carcinoid tumours usually found in the intestinal tract by being composed of argyrophil (not argentaffin) cells of the enterochromaffin-like (ECL) type. fasting plasma levels of gastrin, which is believed to be trophic to ECL cells, were very high in all patients. Thus, chronic hyperplasia of gastric ECL cells (as a result of hypergastrinaemia) may have been responsible for development of the tumours. Long-term, uninterrupted achlorhydria produced by potent inhibitors of gastric acid secretion might therefore predispose to carcinoid tumours of the stomach.
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ranking = 1
keywords = anaemia
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