thank you so much, i have a presentation in my last semester about epithelial mesenchymal transition (gastric carcinogenisis) induced by H.pylori and i have to describe the correa's cascade, this video helped me a lot, i hope i can pass my presentation with success (sorry i'm not very good at english, my second language is french) :)
Which lymphocytes are activated in lymphocytic gastritis ? Can Iga be produced in untreated celiac patient if the first reactions happen in the stomach with eosinophilia?
Pleas can anyone explain symptoms. I've completed my Antibiotics and H-pylori is negative. Now after Endoscopy doctor told me that I've in-active chronic gastritis. I've swelling at my left side i feels pain at left upper side, also body pains, body aches, left arm pain at node point. I've no such acidity symptoms. Please can have solution.Thanks
@santatamang2138 hi .. Sorry to hear .. Yes alhmdulillah I'm good. Actually i got multiple tests and it was not gastritis, i was suffering from a lung spot and my left side pain came from that , then 2 years before doctor started treatment of it and I'm Okay till now..
Yes. We see it all the time. It is usually mild chronic gastritis without active inflammation. It might be associated with alcohol consumption, smoking, PPI treatment, or previous H.pylori infection after eradication. Different category is type A/autoimmune chronic gastritis.
Filip Sokol November 2019 report: 1 stomach antral mucosa biopsy fragment showed shows increase lamina lymphoplasmacytic infiltrates including lymphoid aggregates. Giemsa stain negative for h pylori.. 2 separate duodenum biopsy fragments showed Focal villous blunting .mucous metaplasia and increased lamina propria lymphoplasmacytic infiltrate. No active inflammation . On PPI since Sept-2019 and during time of endoscopy .Tested negative for h pylori through urea breath test 2 years ago but have not been tested again -is h pylori still a possibility? Is duodenum metaplasia pre-cancerous? And should i have more stomach biopsy done . Doctor only took 1 biopsy fragment. I do have a history of NSAID use but i am worried of h pylori false negative use of PPI for my treatment.
Yes. It needs to treated by a combination of antibiotics to eradicate HP infection. Proton pump inhibitors, H2 blockers, and antacids are used to inhibit acid production, promote healing and neutralize stomach acid. Without treatment, it can progress to peptic ulcer.
@@SuperPreshan It depends on the severity of infection and inflammation. Just a reminder: there is atrophic gastritis/multifocal atrophic gastritis usually associated with H.pylori infection, and autoimmune/type A atrophic gastritis with completely different etiology associated with anti-parietal cell antibodies and anti-intrinsic factor antibodies.
@@FilipSokol so mild superficial chronic gastritis without hpylori will generally heal. I was cured of hpylori however mild chonic gastritis was still present in my histology.
Can you please explain ‘mild chronic inactive gastritis’ that’s my recent diagnosis and the doctors didn’t explain it much! I have been searching for information but can’t find much
It is a descriptive, histopathological diagnosis. In reporting gastric biopsies, pathologists look at the chronic inflammatory component (lymphocytes, plasma cells) and active inflammatory component (neutrophils) and grade them as mild, moderate and severe. Pathologists also differentiate between autoimmune (type A), non-autoimmune (type B), and chemical (type C) gastritis. Type A is autoimmune-mediated, type B might be associated with Helicobacter pylori (not always), type C is typically associated with reflux or medication. Histology does not always correlate well with symptoms. Mild chronic, non-active gastritis means that the pathologist can see some lymphocytes and plasma cells, and that’s about it. It is usually type-B, Helicobacter pylori-negative gastritis; therefore, it does not require antibiotic treatment. It might be caused by tobacco, alcohol, pain killers, chilli peppers etc. The underlying cause is often not clear. Symptomatic cases may be treated by antacids or/and proton pump inhibitors. Therefore, in conclusion, Helicobacter pylori-negative mild chronic inactive gastritis doesn’t really mean anything, especially if asymptomatic.
@@FilipSokol Histology does not always correlate well with symptoms. i can relate so much. my symptoms started out of nowhere in January 6 2022. bad cramping pain pressure nausea, became way better fast after taking ppi, just 2 weeks and not even changing diet much i was only burping more often but other symptoms went away. got endoscopy in 2022 mid of March. diagnosed chronic active gastritis type C. after stopping ppi, symptoms returned way worse. have experienced this a few times and over time got more and more symptoms after ignoring them and just eating freely. now i still only have mild gastritis they say, even inactive at some point but my symptoms are completely out of control. in over 1.5years my symptoms have become so much worse and a lot of them added to it. up until 2023 i never had pain for example. also no back pain. now multiple symptoms plague me daily. docs tell me its in my head but i know better and know many people with the same experience. its so unfair 30% of ppl dont experience symptms with ulcers, why does gastritis cause so bad issues for some. i rlly hate it
thank you so much, i have a presentation in my last semester about epithelial mesenchymal transition (gastric carcinogenisis) induced by H.pylori and i have to describe the correa's cascade, this video helped me a lot, i hope i can pass my presentation with success (sorry i'm not very good at english, my second language is french) :)
I am glad you found it helpful. Good luck with your presentation.
Please keep uploading such informative and well explained histopathology videos...... It's very useful, Thank you.
Thank you, I will
Which lymphocytes are activated in lymphocytic gastritis ?
Can Iga be produced in untreated celiac patient if the first reactions happen in the stomach with eosinophilia?
Thank 4 this great explination
Coud it be not diagnos h .p if there is an inflamation .?
I have chronic active lympocitich gastritis
Wl are u cured now plz tell me plz plz
@@poojaverma9870 are u cured
Could you please offer me advice, is it possible for biopsy sample to test for Antibiotic sensitivities 🙏🙏🙏 if yes how many days it takes.
I don't think so. You need a cultivation, which is not routinely done.
Pleas can anyone explain symptoms.
I've completed my Antibiotics and H-pylori is negative. Now after Endoscopy doctor told me that I've in-active chronic gastritis. I've swelling at my left side i feels pain at left upper side, also body pains, body aches, left arm pain at node point. I've no such acidity symptoms. Please can have solution.Thanks
How are you now?
Are you healed with chronic active gastritis?
I have chronic active gastritis help me
@santatamang2138 hi ..
Sorry to hear ..
Yes alhmdulillah I'm good. Actually i got multiple tests and it was not gastritis, i was suffering from a lung spot and my left side pain came from that , then 2 years before doctor started treatment of it and I'm Okay till now..
@@sibtainabbas1964 ooo okay thanks for replying
did doc did endoscopy and told you gastritis@@sibtainabbas1964
@@sibtainabbas1964 doctor did biopsy also ??
Can active chronic lympothtic gastrits be heald if it is not caused by h.p?
Can you have chronic gastritis with out h pylori?
Yes. We see it all the time. It is usually mild chronic gastritis without active inflammation. It might be associated with alcohol consumption, smoking, PPI treatment, or previous H.pylori infection after eradication. Different category is type A/autoimmune chronic gastritis.
Filip Sokol November 2019 report:
1 stomach antral mucosa biopsy fragment showed shows increase lamina lymphoplasmacytic infiltrates including lymphoid aggregates. Giemsa stain negative for h pylori..
2 separate duodenum biopsy fragments showed
Focal villous blunting .mucous metaplasia and increased lamina propria lymphoplasmacytic infiltrate. No active inflammation .
On PPI since Sept-2019 and during time of endoscopy .Tested negative for h pylori through urea breath test 2 years ago but have not been tested again -is h pylori still a possibility?
Is duodenum metaplasia pre-cancerous?
And should i have more stomach biopsy done . Doctor only took 1 biopsy fragment. I do have a history of NSAID use but i am worried of h pylori false negative use of PPI for my treatment.
@@FilipSokol is it possible to heal this with herbs
Cascarda sacrada and triphiia with magnesium
Can this condition be healed?
Yes. It needs to treated by a combination of antibiotics to eradicate HP infection. Proton pump inhibitors, H2 blockers, and antacids are used to inhibit acid production, promote healing and neutralize stomach acid. Without treatment, it can progress to peptic ulcer.
@@FilipSokol thanks for replying. How long does it take chronic gastritis to lead to atrophic gastritis? Does it take decades?
@@SuperPreshan It depends on the severity of infection and inflammation. Just a reminder: there is atrophic gastritis/multifocal atrophic gastritis usually associated with H.pylori infection, and autoimmune/type A atrophic gastritis with completely different etiology associated with anti-parietal cell antibodies and anti-intrinsic factor antibodies.
@@FilipSokol so mild superficial chronic gastritis without hpylori will generally heal. I was cured of hpylori however mild chonic gastritis was still present in my histology.
What if it is not H pylori and it is only inactive chronic gastritis
Can you please explain ‘mild chronic inactive gastritis’ that’s my recent diagnosis and the doctors didn’t explain it much! I have been searching for information but can’t find much
It is a descriptive, histopathological diagnosis. In reporting gastric biopsies, pathologists look at the chronic inflammatory component (lymphocytes, plasma cells) and active inflammatory component (neutrophils) and grade them as mild, moderate and severe. Pathologists also differentiate between autoimmune (type A), non-autoimmune (type B), and chemical (type C) gastritis. Type A is autoimmune-mediated, type B might be associated with Helicobacter pylori (not always), type C is typically associated with reflux or medication.
Histology does not always correlate well with symptoms.
Mild chronic, non-active gastritis means that the pathologist can see some lymphocytes and plasma cells, and that’s about it.
It is usually type-B, Helicobacter pylori-negative gastritis; therefore, it does not require antibiotic treatment.
It might be caused by tobacco, alcohol, pain killers, chilli peppers etc. The underlying cause is often not clear.
Symptomatic cases may be treated by antacids or/and proton pump inhibitors.
Therefore, in conclusion, Helicobacter pylori-negative mild chronic inactive gastritis doesn’t really mean anything, especially if asymptomatic.
@@FilipSokol Histology does not always correlate well with symptoms.
i can relate so much. my symptoms started out of nowhere in January 6 2022. bad cramping pain pressure nausea, became way better fast after taking ppi, just 2 weeks and not even changing diet much i was only burping more often but other symptoms went away. got endoscopy in 2022 mid of March. diagnosed chronic active gastritis type C. after stopping ppi, symptoms returned way worse. have experienced this a few times and over time got more and more symptoms after ignoring them and just eating freely. now i still only have mild gastritis they say, even inactive at some point but my symptoms are completely out of control. in over 1.5years my symptoms have become so much worse and a lot of them added to it. up until 2023 i never had pain for example. also no back pain. now multiple symptoms plague me daily. docs tell me its in my head but i know better and know many people with the same experience. its so unfair 30% of ppl dont experience symptms with ulcers, why does gastritis cause so bad issues for some. i rlly hate it
Can you please tell me where do you get these pictures or which app do you use 🙏🙏🥺
This one is from the atlases.muni.cz Others are from pathpresenter.net It is always mentioned in the description below video.
can you please do a video about gastric metaplasia and dysplasia
Here is a brilliant video by Dr Montgomery. You may find it helpful. ruclips.net/video/LuTWR7nDH_Y/видео.html
thank you very much, very informative and on point
You're very welcome
thank you for this video, it was very helpful
Glad it was helpful!
Great video
Glad you enjoyed it.
Thank u sooomuch
Thank you for your comment. You are welcome.
Thank you so much:)
You're welcome!
Thank you🙏
Welcome!