TY - JOUR
T1 - Gastric acid secretion and enteric infection in Bangladesh
AU - Evans, Carlton A.W.
AU - Gilman, Robert H.
AU - Rabbani, G. H.
AU - Salazar, Guillermo
AU - Ali, Akbar
N1 - Funding Information:
Acknowledgements This study was supported by NIH grant l-UOl-A135894-0 1. We are aateful to Dr G. Hall. Dr R. Black and Dr I. Fried-land for edXoria1 help and to Dr*G. Madico for computer assistance.
PY - 1997
Y1 - 1997
N2 - In developing countries many enteric infections are caused by acid-sensitive pathogens. Failure of the gastric acid barrier to infection has been reported in cholera but gastric acid secretion has been little studied in other enteric infections. We therefore studied basal and stimulated gastric acid in 185 Bangladeshi men admitted to hospital for the treatment of enteric infection. Patients with dysentery (amoebiasis, n = 24 and shigellosis, n = 19) and culture-negative diarrhoea (n = 69) had similar mean gastric acid levels (basal, 3-5 mmol/h; stimulated, 11-17 mmol/h), which remained stable in those patients studied throughout 12 weeks of convalescence. In contrast, patients with secretory diarrhoea caused by cholera or enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli (ETEC) had low gastric acid levels (P < 0.05 compared with other groups) (cholera, n = 34: basal mean 1.8 mmol/h [SD = 2.2], stimulated mean 7.9 mmol/h [SD = 6.4]; ETEC, n = 39: basal mean 2.7 mmol/h [SD = 2.8], stimulated mean 9.4 mmol/h [SD = 7.5]). Cholera patients' gastric acid level rose during convalescence to similar levels to the dysentery patients'. Low gastric acid level was associated with severe disease in patients with cholera (P < 0.02) or ETEC (P < 0.05). Gastric acid level fell with increasing age (P < 0.007) but this did not account for the differences between groups. Gastric acid levels were not associated with Giardia duodenalis or Strongyloides stercoralis co-infection, fever, use of tobacco, or chewing betel nut. Cholera and secretory diarrhoea caused by ETEC may, therefore, partly result from a reduction in gastric acid level which does not occur during dysentery. Factors which impair gastric acid secretion may predispose to diarrhoeal disease in developing countries.
AB - In developing countries many enteric infections are caused by acid-sensitive pathogens. Failure of the gastric acid barrier to infection has been reported in cholera but gastric acid secretion has been little studied in other enteric infections. We therefore studied basal and stimulated gastric acid in 185 Bangladeshi men admitted to hospital for the treatment of enteric infection. Patients with dysentery (amoebiasis, n = 24 and shigellosis, n = 19) and culture-negative diarrhoea (n = 69) had similar mean gastric acid levels (basal, 3-5 mmol/h; stimulated, 11-17 mmol/h), which remained stable in those patients studied throughout 12 weeks of convalescence. In contrast, patients with secretory diarrhoea caused by cholera or enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli (ETEC) had low gastric acid levels (P < 0.05 compared with other groups) (cholera, n = 34: basal mean 1.8 mmol/h [SD = 2.2], stimulated mean 7.9 mmol/h [SD = 6.4]; ETEC, n = 39: basal mean 2.7 mmol/h [SD = 2.8], stimulated mean 9.4 mmol/h [SD = 7.5]). Cholera patients' gastric acid level rose during convalescence to similar levels to the dysentery patients'. Low gastric acid level was associated with severe disease in patients with cholera (P < 0.02) or ETEC (P < 0.05). Gastric acid level fell with increasing age (P < 0.007) but this did not account for the differences between groups. Gastric acid levels were not associated with Giardia duodenalis or Strongyloides stercoralis co-infection, fever, use of tobacco, or chewing betel nut. Cholera and secretory diarrhoea caused by ETEC may, therefore, partly result from a reduction in gastric acid level which does not occur during dysentery. Factors which impair gastric acid secretion may predispose to diarrhoeal disease in developing countries.
KW - Amoebiasis
KW - Bangladesh
KW - Cholera
KW - Diarrhoeal disease
KW - ETEC
KW - Escherichia coli
KW - Gastric acid secretion
KW - Hypochlorhydria
KW - Shigellosis
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U2 - 10.1016/S0035-9203(97)90523-X
DO - 10.1016/S0035-9203(97)90523-X
M3 - Article
C2 - 9509179
AN - SCOPUS:0031460938
SN - 0035-9203
VL - 91
SP - 681
EP - 685
JO - Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene
JF - Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene
IS - 6
ER -