Atrophic gastritis and chronic diarrhea due to Helicobacter pylori infection in early infancy: A case report
Rationale:
Helicobacter pylori infection causes atrophic gastritis in childhood, but atrophic gastritis due to H pylori infection is extremely rare in infancy. The relationship between H pylori infection and chronic diarrhea without protein leakage remains controversial.
Patient concerns:
An 8-month-old male infant presented to our hospital with severe watery diarrhea, erythema, and failure to thrive from approximately 1 month after birth. Blood, stool, esophagogastroduodenoscopy, total colonoscopy, and H pylori urease analysis results were positive, thereby suggesting atrophic gastritis.
Diagnoses:
Atrophic gastritis and chronic diarrhea due to H pylori infection.
Interventions:
We performed H pylori eradication therapy using triple therapy with vonoprazan (6 mg/kg), amoxicillin (300 mg/d), and clarithromycin (120 mg/kg) for 7 days.
Outcomes:
From approximately 1 week after the H pylori eradication therapy, the frequency of defecation had decreased, stool shape had improved, and body weight had gradually increased.
Lessons:
H pylori infection can cause atrophic gastritis and chronic diarrhea even in infancy. Early eradication therapy for H pylori infection may be useful for prevention of gastric cancer and improvement in growth disorders.
Source: Medicine - Category: Internal Medicine Tags: Research Article: Clinical Case Report Source Type: research
More News: Amoxicillin | Biaxin | Cancer | Cancer & Oncology | Childhood Cancer | Clarithromycin | Colonoscopy | Esophagogastroduodenoscopy | Gastric (Stomach) Cancer | Gastritis | Gastroenterology | Helicobacter Pylori | Hospitals | Internal Medicine | Lessons | Panendoscopy