Title: | Correlation of serum antibody titres with invasive methods for rapid detection of Helicobacter pylori infections in symptomatic children.
ارتباط نسبة الأجسام المضادة في مصل الدم مع الأساليب الباضعة(الغازية) للكشف السريع عن عدوي البكتريا الحلزونية البوابية لدى الأطفال المصابين. |
Authors: | أ.م.د. خالد عبد القوي إبراهيم1-د. عبير مصطفي المحلاوي2-د.عامر عبد الحميد3-أ.م د. السيد احمد عبد الوهاب4 أقسام طب الأطفال1 والأنسجة وبيولوجيا الخلية2، كلية طب بنها-جامعة بنها، أقسام الجهاز الهضمي والكبد والأمراض المتوطنة3، والباثولوجيا الاكلينيكية4، كلية ط |
Year: | 2012 |
Keywords: | Not Available |
Journal: | Not Available |
Volume: | Not Available |
Issue: | Not Available |
Pages: | Not Available |
Publisher: | Not Available |
Local/International: | International |
Paper Link: | |
Full paper | Not Available |
Supplementary materials | Not Available |
Abstract: |
Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) is causally associated with peptic ulcer disease and gastric carcinoma. Typically, children get infected during the first decade of life, but diseases associated with H. pylori are seen mainly in adults. Multiple diagnostic methods are available for the detection of H. pylori infection. The aim of this study was to evaluate the correlation and diagnostic accuracy of three invasive methods [rapid urease test (RUT), histology and bacterial culture] and one non-invasive method (IgG serology) for diagnosis of H. pylori infection in a prospective cohort study conducted on 50 symptomatic children between two and eighteen years of age. Endoscopies with gastric biopsies were performed for RUT, culture and histopathological examination, respectively. IgG antibodies were measured in patient sera using a commercially available enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). RUT and positive H. pylori IgG antibodies were concordant in 88% (44/50) of patients. Both tests were negative in 32% (16/50), and both were positive in 56% (28/50). Disagreement occurred in 12% (6/50) of the patients: three of them (6%) had positive RUT and negative H. pylori IgG, and another three (6%) had negative RUT and positive H. pylori IgG. A combination of RUT with non-invasive serology constituted the optimum approach to the diagnosis of H. pylori infection in symptomatic children. The non-invasive serological test (ELISA) could not be used alone as the gold standard because it cannot distinguish between active and recently treated infection; and bacterial culture could not be used alone because of its low sensitivity. |