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Peptic Ulcer Disease

Peptic Ulcer Disease

Peptic Ulcer Disease

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PUD: Intro & Epidemiology - Tiny Tummy Ailments

  • Definition: Mucosal defect > 5mm in stomach/duodenum; depth through muscularis mucosae into submucosa.
  • Types:
    • Gastric Ulcer (GU): Less common in peds vs DU.
    • Duodenal Ulcer (DU): More frequent, esp. proximal.
  • Pediatric Epidemiology:
    • Overall rare vs adults; DU > GU, particularly >10 years.
    • Neonates: Acute stress ulcers (Cushing - CNS; Curling - burns).
    • Older children: Helicobacter pylori infection is a primary etiological factor.
    • NSAID use: An increasingly recognized risk factor.
    • India: High H. pylori prevalence; pediatric PUD data limited, varies regionally.

⭐ Duodenal ulcers are significantly more common than gastric ulcers in the pediatric population, frequently associated with H. pylori. Peptic Ulcer Disease: Stomach and Duodenum Ulcers

PUD: Etiopathogenesis - Ulcer Bugaboos

  • Core Imbalance: Aggressive factors overwhelm mucosal defenses.
    • Aggressive: Gastric acid, pepsin, H. pylori, NSAIDs.
    • Defensive: Mucus-bicarbonate barrier, prostaglandins, mucosal blood flow, epithelial regeneration.
  • Key Etiologies & Mechanisms:
    • Helicobacter pylori:
      • Most common (DU > GU).
      • Virulence: Urease, Toxins (📌 CagA, VacA); causes inflammation, ↑acid.
    • NSAIDs:
      • Inhibit prostaglandins (COX-1/2) → ↓defense.
      • Direct mucosal injury.
    • Stress Ulcers (SRMD):
      • Critically ill: Burns (Curling's), Head injury (Cushing's).
      • Patho: Splanchnic hypoperfusion → ischemia.
    • Zollinger-Ellison Syndrome (ZES):
      • Gastrinoma → massive acid hypersecretion.
      • Clues: Multiple, refractory, atypical ulcers.

H. pylori: childhood infection, Class I carcinogen (gastric adenocarcinoma), MALT lymphoma risk.

PUD: Clinical Features - Bellyache Clues

  • Infants & Toddlers (< 2 years):

    • Poor feeding, vomiting (may be heme-positive)
    • Irritability, crying spells (especially post-prandial)
    • Failure to thrive
    • Melena (less common)
  • Preschool & School-Age Children (2-12 years):

    • Periumbilical or epigastric pain (often nocturnal)
    • Nausea, vomiting (may be coffee-ground)
    • Anemia (iron deficiency)
    • Dyspepsia
  • Adolescents (> 12 years):

    • Epigastric pain (classic gnawing/burning)
    • Pain relieved by food/antacids (duodenal ulcer) or worsened by food (gastric ulcer)
    • Nocturnal pain waking from sleep
    • Weight loss
  • Alarm Signs (⚠️ Red Flags):

    • Persistent vomiting (especially bilious/projectile)
    • Hematemesis, melena
    • Severe abdominal pain, guarding
    • Unexplained weight loss, dysphagia
    • Family history of PUD, GI cancer

⭐ Nighttime pain awakening a child is a classic symptom highly suggestive of peptic ulcer disease, particularly duodenal ulcers.

📌 Mnemonic (Alarm signs): "Abdominal pain (severe), Loss of weight, Anemia, Recurrent vomiting, Melena/hematemesis, Swallowing difficulty" (ALARM-S).

PUD: Diagnosis & Management - Scope, Soothe, Solve

Diagnosis (Scope):

  • Gold Standard: Upper GI Endoscopy + Biopsy (histology, Rapid Urease Test - RUT).
  • H. pylori Testing:
    • Invasive: RUT, histology, culture.
    • Non-invasive: Urea Breath Test (UBT), Stool Antigen Test (SAT). Serology (IgG) indicates exposure.
  • Scope Indications: Alarm symptoms (weight loss, bleeding, dysphagia), age >55 yrs, persistent NSAID use, failure of empiric therapy.

Management (Soothe & Solve):

  • Acid Suppression (Soothe):
    • PPIs (e.g., Omeprazole) for 4-8 wks.
    • H2RAs: less potent.
  • H. pylori Eradication (Solve):
    • Triple Therapy (📌 OAC: Omeprazole + Amoxicillin + Clarithromycin) for 14 days.
    • Bismuth Quadruple (📌 PBMT: PPI + Bismuth + Metronidazole + Tetracycline) for 10-14 days (if resistance/failure).
  • Lifestyle: Stop NSAIDs, smoking, alcohol.
  • Complications: Bleeding (endoscopy, IV PPI), Perforation (surgery), Obstruction (NGT, dilation).

⭐ Urea Breath Test (UBT) or Stool Antigen Test (SAT) are preferred non-invasive tests for confirming H. pylori eradication, performed ≥4 weeks post-therapy & 1-2 weeks off PPIs.

H. pylori Diagnostic Tests

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • H. pylori is the primary cause of duodenal ulcers in children; NSAIDs are more linked to gastric ulcers.
  • Key symptom: Epigastric pain, often worse at night or with fasting; may present as recurrent abdominal pain.
  • Upper GI endoscopy with biopsy (for H. pylori testing like CLO test/histology) is the diagnostic gold standard.
  • Triple therapy (PPI + two antibiotics, e.g., amoxicillin and clarithromycin) is first-line for H. pylori eradication.
  • Consider Zollinger-Ellison syndrome (gastrinoma) with multiple, refractory, or unusually located ulcers.
  • Major complications include GI bleeding (melena, hematemesis), perforation, and gastric outlet obstruction.
  • Stress ulcers (Cushing's - CNS injury; Curling's - burns) can occur in critically ill children.

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