Abstract

The pathogenesis of stress ulceration in seriously ill patients is uncertain and the pathogenic role of Helicobacter pylori infection is unknown. We therefore assessed the seroprevalence of patients of a cardiosurgical intensive care unit (ICU) with clinically important stress ulcer bleeding. We compared this prevalence with a control group matched for this kind of surgical intervention, missing history of peptic ulcer disease, age and gender. Prospective survey. Cardiosurgical ICU in a university teaching hospital. Two thousand five hundred seventy cardiosurgical patients with intravenous ranitidine stress ulcer prophylaxis were screened for clinically important stress ulcer bleeding. Helicobacter pylori seropositivity was measured in all patients with a clinically important bleeding and in a control group of 245 consecutive cardiosurgical patients, matched for the kind of cardiosurgical intervention, age and gender. In 56 of 2,570 (2.1%) patients signs of clinically important bleeding were seen. Endoscopical examination revealed stress ulcer bleeding in 42 cases. The incidence of stress ulcer bleeding was 1.6%. The seropositivity of the group with ulcer bleeding was 45.2 % whereas 62.4 % of the patients in the control group were Helicobacter pylori positive (p = 0.08). Our results suggest that the Helicobacter pylori infection does not play a pathogenic role in stress ulcer bleeding. Prophylactic cure of Helicobacter pylori can not be recommended in this setting.

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