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Hypertrophic gastritis

From Surgopaedia

Also known as Ménétrier disease and hypoproteinaemic hypertrophic gastropathy

Epidemiology

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  • Rare

Aetiology

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  • Unknown
  • Seems to be associated with CMV infection in children and H. pylori in adults

Pathophysiology

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  • Histopathology will show foveolar hyperplasia (expansion of surface mucus cells) with decreased or absent parietal cells
  • Associated with protein loss from the stomach, excessive mucus production, and hypochlorhydria or achlorhydria
  • Increased levels of transforming growth factor-alpha have been noted in the gastric mucosa of patients with the disease, which can stimulate epithelial cell growth and inhibit gastric acid secretion
  • Associated with increased risk of gastric neoplasm (risk estimates vary from 2-15%)

Presentation

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  • Epigastric pain
  • Vomiting
  • Weight loss
  • Decreased appetite
  • Peripheral oedema

Workup

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  • Gastroscopy
    • Massive gastric folds in the fundus and body of the stomach, giving the mucosa a cobblestone or cerebriform appearance
    • Antrum typically spared
    • Biopsy the mucosa to establish the diagnosis - need to exclude lymphoma and carcinoma

Management

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  • Inconsistent results
  • Acid suppression, octreotide, and CMV/H. pylori eradication have been tried with some success
  • Indications for total gastrectomy:
    • Patients who continue to have massive protein loss despite optimal medical therapy and high-protein diet
    • Dysplasia/carcinoma

Surveillance

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  • Gastroscopy every 1-2 years to look for cancer