Description
Inflammatory reaction in the stomach. Typically involves the mucosa; seldom the full thickness of the stomach wall:
- Patchy erythema of gastric mucosa: A common endoscopic finding; usually insignificant
- Erosive gastritis: A reaction to mucosal injury by a noxious chemical agent (e.g., drugs [especially NSAIDs] or alcohol)
- Reflux gastritis:
- A reaction to protracted reflux exposure to bile and pancreatic juice, usually associated with a defective pylorus
- Typically limited to the prepyloric antrum
- Hemorrhagic gastritis (stress ulceration):
- A reaction to hemodynamic disorder (e.g., hypovolemia or hypoxia [as in shock])
- Also common in ICUs
- Infectious gastritis:
- Commonly associated with Helicobacter pylori (possibly causative, maybe opportunistic)
- Viral infection, usually as a component of systemic infection, is common.
- Significant infection by other specific microbes is rare.
- Gastric mucosal atrophy, sometimes called atrophic gastritis:
- Frequent, in varying degrees, in the elderly
- Invariable in primary (pernicious) anemia
- Synonym(s): Erosive gastritis; Reflux gastritis; Hemorrhagic gastritis; Acute gastritis
- Neutrophil cellular infiltration in acute gastritis
- Patches of lymphoid follicles noted in chronic gastritis, along with plasma cells and macrophages
- More than 50% of humans are colonized with H. pylori
ALERTGeriatric Considerations- Persons >60 often harbor H. pylori infection
Pediatric Considerations- Gastritis rarely occurs in infants or children.
Gastritis has been found in 5-Minute Clinical Consult
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