Reduced thickness of gastric mucosa and retarded progression of chronic gastritis in patients with renal failure.

APMIS(1988)

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Abstract
Conflicting results are reported in the literature on the structure and function of gastric mucosa in patients with chronic renal failure (CRF). In the present endoscopic study of 68 CRF patients on conservative treatment (regular dialyses or transplantations had not yet been undertaken), we sought to clarify whether CRF leads to hypertrophic or hypotrophic phenomena in gastric mucosa, as interpreted by the presence and grade of gastritis and by the thickness of the gastric mucosa. We found that the mean progression of gastritis in both antrum and body was significantly slower than expected in CFR patients, and that the thickness of both antral and body mucosa was significantly lower in CFR patients than in non-CRF controls. Furthermore, although the thickness of the oxyntic body mucosa in CRF showed a positive correlation to serum gastrin (SeGa) levels and even though 12 of the patients showed high SeGa levels corresponding to those seen in the Zollinger-Ellison synbdrome (300-1500 ng/l), the thickness of the oxyntic body mucosa in CRF patients did not exceed that seen in control subjects with normal SeGa. We conclude that CRF exerts inhibitory effects on the gastric mucosa resulting in retardation in the progression of chronic gastritis and hypotrophy of the gastric mucous membrane.
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