Abstract

THE DISCOVERY OF THE BACTERIAL CAUSE OF GASTRITIS Prior to the discovery of Helicobacter pylori , gastritis and peptic ulceration were considered not to have a bacterial origin. This changed in April 1982, when spiral bacteria that had been observed on the gastric mucosa by Warren were cultured for the first time in the Microbiology Department of Royal Perth Hospital, Western Australia, when the author (CSG) was head of the department (31). We noted that “in old cultures coccoid bodies appeared.” These coccoid forms are now thought to be the dormant phase of H. pylori . Among 100 patients biopsied in that study, those with gastritis and a duodenal ulcer yielded a growth of H. pylori . Thus when Marshall and Warren studied the medical notes, they realised that gastritis and peptic ulceration might have a bacterial origin (32). From Campylobacter pyloridis to H. pylori The first name given by the author to these gastric spiral bacteria was Campylobacter pyloridis (31). However, after six years of intensive bacteriological work by the author's research team in Western Australia, it was shown that Campylobacter pyloridis should be in a new genus, which he named Helicobacter . In 1989, in conjunction with other microbiologists in Queensland, Australia and in England, he published the new genus name; the first two species were Helicobacter pylori , the human stomach pathogen, and Helicobacter mustelae , the stomach pathogen of the ferret (20).

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