Abstract

Tindberg Y, Blennow M, Granström M. Clinical symptoms and social factors in a cohort of children spontaneously clearing Helicobacter pylori infection. Acta Pædiatr 1999; 88: 631‐5. Stockholm. ISSN 0803‐5253In a cohort study of 305 Swedish children, repeated blood samples and structured questionnaires were obtained from 6 mo to 11 y of age. Of the 40 children seropositive for Helicobacter pylori in one or more samples, 32 (80%) had cleared the infection by 11 y of age. No association was found between H. pylori seropositivity at any time and reported antibiotic consumption, size of home and family, type of day‐care, history of atopic disease, length of breastfeeding or peptic ulcer disease in the family. Girls reported more (p = 0.002) unspecified abdominal pain during childhood than boys, but the difference in H. pylori infection rate (15/150, 10% for boys and 25/144, 17% for girls) was not significantly different (p = 0.09). Unspecified abdominal pain during childhood was reported more often (OR adjusted for gender = 2.2, 95% CI = 1.0‐4.4, p = 0.04) for the children seropositive at some point (17/39, 44%) than for the seronegative children (54/217, 25%). RAP at 11 y of age was more often reported by the 9/36 (25%) children seropositive at some time in life than by the 23/172 (13%) seronegatives, but the difference was not statistically significant (OR adjusted for gender = 2.0, 95% CI = 0.8‐4.6, p = 0.1). The study shows that H. pylori seropositivity was associated with a parental report of unspecified abdominal pain during childhood. Also, a history of unspecified abdominal pain was more common (OR = 51.6, 95% CI = 15.6‐220, p< 0.001) in children reporting RAP at 11 y of age. □Childhood infection, H. pylori, socioeconomic conditions

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