Abstract

Background: The association of apoptosis was analysed in three different compartments (foveolar cells- FC, proliferating zone-PZ and glandular part-GP) of antrum and corpus mucosa specimens with development of atrophy and the extent of apoptosis as depending on grade of chronic inflammation, activity of gastritis and Helicobacter pylori colonization at two time points of an 18-year follow-up in an adult population from Saaremaa, Estonia, with a high prevalence of H. pylori infection were compared. Methods: A total of 68 persons (31 men, 37 women; median age, 39 years in 1979) from a primary sample of 304 subjects, endoscoped in 1979 and reinvestigated by endoscopy and biopsy in 1997, were included in the study. The state of the gastric mucosa and the presence of H. pylori in the antrum and corpus mucosa were assessed in accordance with the Sydney system. The dynamics of apoptotic index (AI) between two time points in 1979 and 1997 was evaluated in antrum biopsies of 49 persons and in corpus biopsies of 64 persons. Apoptosis was measured using terminal deoxyuridine nucleotide nick end labelling (TUNEL) histochemistry. Results: The antrum as well as the corpus of 2/68 persons were H. pylori negative at both time points. Atrophy developed in 9/68 persons in the antrum and in 23/68 in the corpus. In PZ and GP of the corpus mucosa as well as in GP of the antrum mucosa, AI decreased significantly during 18 years compared with initial values (P < 0.05), which was not associated with development of atrophy. In all compartments of the antrum and corpus mucosa, studied at the initial and end points of observation, AI did not reveal a difference in persons with and without development of atrophy (P > 0.05). In the samples of 1979 the highest independent effect on the value of AI in the FC compartment for the antrum was exerted by grade of activity of gastritis (P = 0.01) and in GP by degree of chronic inflammation (P = 0.03), while in the samples of 1997 the highest effect was exerted by grade of H. pylori colonization (P = 0.02 and 0.03 in FC and GP, respectively). For the corpus mucosa AI was most strongly affected also by grade of activity of gastritis in FC compartment (P = 0.02) and by degree of chronic inflammation in PZ (P = 0.04), but not by grade of H. pylori colonization. Conclusion: AI was not associated with development of atrophy, but was largely dependent on grade of activity of gastritis and degree of chronic inflammation; in the antrum mucosa AI depended also on grade of H. pylori colonization.

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