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All about gastric - What causes gastric & how to differentiate between having gastritis and a gastric ulcer?


An endoscopy is the best way of seeing what is going on in your stomach.

Getting ‘gastric’
TELL ME ABOUT . . .
By Dr Y.L.M

A gastric ulcer can cause gastritis, but gastritis is not always caused by a gastric ulcer.

I am prone to bouts of ‘gastric’. Every time I don’t eat, I get a funny, acidic, and very ‘hot’ feeling in my stomach. My mother tells me that having ‘gastric’ is the same as having a ‘gastric ulcer’. Is this true?

Actually, gastritis means inflammation of the lining of your stomach (‘gastro’ means stomach, and ‘-itis’ means inflammation). It’s not a single disease, but rather, a condition that is contributed to by many causes.

A gastric ulcer is an actual hole, or sore, or break in the normal lining of your stomach. Having gastritis does not necessarily mean you have the ‘hole’.

In gastritis, you have pain or discomfort in the upper area of your abdomen, the one flanked by the ‘V’ of your ribcage. This pain is sometimes called dyspepsia.

What causes ‘gastric’?

The causes are very varied:

● Infections: Bacteria (Helicobacter pylori being the most common), viruses, fungi, parasites and worms can all cost gastritis, as well as tuberculosis and syphilis.

● Medicines: Aspirin, non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, steroids, potassium supplements, iron tablets and chemotherapy.

● Alcohol

● Poisons: For example, acid, bleach and foreign bodies, like plastic toys.

● Stress, due to being injured or very ill. Plenty of patients who are ill in the hospital develop gastritis.

● Frequent vomiting

What is this Helicobacter pylori bacteria? I have heard so much about it and the fact that it is related to ‘gastric’.

Rightly so. The discovery of this bacteria has changed the entire landscape of gastritis and gastric/duodenal ulcer treatment over the last two decades.

This bacteria infects 50% of the world’s population! Eighty percent of those infected have no symptoms.

Helicobacter pylori causes a very chronic, low grade inflammation of our stomach and duodenal lining. (The duodenum is the first part of our small intestine, which is divided into three parts.)

Ten percent of all those infected develop an ulcer.

This bacteria can survive the highly acidic environment of our stomach, and is impervious to being destroyed by our digestive enzymes.

Helicobacter pylori also causes an increased chance of you developing stomach cancer or lymphoma.

It must be eradicated if you test positive for it.

How can I differentiate between having gastritis and a gastric ulcer?

For gastritis, pain or discomfort in your central upper abdomen is common.

Sometimes, this pain goes right through from your stomach to your back. The pain feels ‘burning’, or ‘aching’, or ‘sore’.

The pain may be accompanied by belching, bloating, a feeling of fullness, nausea and even vomiting.

In severe gastritis, your stomach lining can bleed. Then, you may even vomit blood, and feel faint or dizzy, be very pale and sweaty, or have dark stools (or faeces).

It can be very difficult to differentiate symptom-wise between gastritis and a gastric ulcer, especially since a gastric ulcer is almost always accompanied by gastritis.

An endoscopy performed by a gastroenterologist is the best way to see your stomach lining.

This procedure requires you to be sedated, then to have an endoscope (a thin, flexible probe with a tiny camera attached to it) passed through your mouth and into your stomach.

At the end of the procedure, you will receive a CD-ROM of your own stomach lining!

So, a gastric ulcer is a complication of what can happen to your stomach lining as a result of gastritis.

How can I treat my gastritis?

Your doctor will have to find out the exact cause of your gastritis.

Once you know what is causing it, you have to avoid the cause.

For example, if the cause of your gastritis is a certain type of medication like aspirin, your doctor can then switch you to a similar type of medication that does not irritate your stomach.

If the cause is alcohol, then you have to cut down on your alcohol intake.

Coffee (caffeine) also triggers gastritis, so you should avoid it if you are prone to getting gastritis after drinking it.

To alleviate your ‘burning’ pain symptoms, you can take antacids.

If these are not enough, you can take histamines (H² blockers), like cimetidine or ranitidine. These reduce the acid secretion of your stomach.

Then there are the newer medicines like proton pump inhibitors (for example, omeprazole). They also block your stomach’s acid secretion, but through another mechanism.

How will I know if I have Helicobacter pylori?

You can take a test.

You can submit a blood sample to test for Helicobacter pylori antibodies. Or a stool sample to look for the actual antigen.

A biopsy can also be taken from your stomach lining through an endoscope, and tested.

Helicobacter pylori is eradicated by a triple therapy consisting of two antibiotics (amoxicillin and clarithromycin) and a proton pump inhibitor, taken for 10 days.

Dr YLM graduated as a medical doctor, and has been writing for many years on various subjects such as medicine, health advice, computers and entertainment. The information contained in this column is for general educational purposes only. Neither The Star nor the author gives any warranty on accuracy, completeness, functionality, usefulness or other assurances as to such information. The Star and the author disclaim all responsibility for any losses, damage to property or personal injury suffered directly or indirectly from reliance on such information.

More on: http://thestar.com.my/health/

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Hazy days up ahead - The air quality in recent days has worsened...


Hazy days up ahead

This picture taken from Kepong at 5.30pm on Sunday shows a barely visible KLCC in a distance. - M. AZHAR ARIF / The Star

Air quality drops but remains at acceptable levels

PETALING JAYA: The air quality in recent days has worsened but the Department of Environment says there is no cause for concern.

DOE director-general Datuk Rosnani Ibarahim said the air pollutant index (API) was below 100 and averages at 60 throughout the country.

The index had gradually dropped from Oct 13, when a general reading of 37 areas in the country showed 76, to 51 as of 11am yesterday.

The majority of the air quality measurement stations in areas with unhealthy air readings reported that dust content was high.

Healthy air levels are supposed to be below 50.

Batu Pahat and Muar recorded the highest readings of around 90 API yesterday, said Rosnani, adding that the DOE was closely monitoring the situation.

She also said bush fires and open burning have been spotted over Sumatra and her department had been alerted.

In Johor Baru, The Star office reported that Batu Pahat and Muar districts were engulfed by thick haze but the DOE had yet to trace its source.

The office received calls from residents who said they were baffled by the phenomenon.

Jenny Chan, 45, who was travelling home to Batu Pahat from Johor Baru, said the hazy conditions were visible from Parit Raja onwards.

“My brother, who was travelling from Kuala Lumpur, called me to say there were similar hazy conditions between Muar and Batu Pahat,” she said.

Batu Pahat resident S.K. Malini Devi, 23, said that the hazy conditions were prevalent in the morning.

“The haze cleared slightly by the late afternoon,” added the technology media graduate.

Johor DOE director Dr Zulkifli Abdul Rahman said the department was aware of the haze and was investigating its cause.

“We are investigating the cause of the haze but have yet to determine the source of the emissions,” he said.

He said as of 11am on Saturday, the API recorded at the air quality measurement station at Muar showed a level of 68.

Zulkifli said the public can get daily nationwide API updates via www.doe.gov.my.



Credits to and source taken from: http://thestar.com.my/news/

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It’s nasi lemak and PM for company for 10-year-old - Yesterday will be a day Mohammad Nur Aliff Omar will long remember

It’s nasi lemak and PM for company for 10-year-old

PUTRAJAYA: Yesterday will be a day Mohammad Nur Aliff Omar will long remember.

The 10-year-old, suffering from Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy, was the breakfast guest of the Prime Minister and his wife.

Mohammad Nur Aliff, from Miri, was accompanied to Seri Perdana by his parents and grandmother as well as representatives of the Children Wish Society of Malaysia.

During the hour-long visit, Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak showed his study and an arowana fish, much to the delight of the boy. The Prime Minister also gave him duit raya.

Mohammad Nur Aliff told reporters that he enjoyed meeting the country’s No. 1 leader.

The boy was diagnosed with Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy - a severe recessive form of muscular dystrophy characterised by rapid progression of muscle degeneration - three years ago.

His father Omar Bakar, 55, said he was thankful to Najib for the time with his son.

Children Wish Society of Malaysia president Tan Sri Dr R.V. Navaratnam said he was touched by the sympathy and care shown by Najib and his wife, Datin Seri Rosmah Mansor. “The meeting cheered up Mohammad Nur Aliff.”

Meanwhile, Najib said the Barisan Nasional government had done “a mountain high of deeds” but chose not to boast about it.

On the other hand, he said, the Opposition did only a few little things “but the noise they make could wake up a whole kampung”.

“We exempted those with electricity bill of RM20 and below from paying it and about one million households throughout the country are enjoying this.

“We did not turn that into an earth-shattering thing,” Najib said when launching the Wanita Umno caring squad carnival at Taman Datuk Ahmad Razali in Ampang here yesterday.

Credits to and source taken from: http://thestar.com.my/news/

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The body of a 12-year-old girl who slipped and fell into Sungai Kelantan, near Dabong two days ago, has been found

Rescuers find girl’s body in river

KUALA KRAI: The body of a 12-year-old girl who slipped and fell into Sungai Kelantan, near Dabong two days ago, has been found.

Kuala Krai Fire and Rescue Department chief Nasir Hassan said the body of Raja Nurafi Raja Hussain was found yesterday about one kilometre from where she fell on Friday.

“The search and rescue operation that started two days ago covered an area of 5km from where the victim had slipped and fell. We reached Kampung Pemberian but there were no sign of the body.

“On the way back, a team member spotted a floating object near Sungai Galas and Sungai Pergau near Dabong and upon inspection, it was the bloated body of the victim,” he said.

The body had been handed over to the police for further action. — Bernama

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Government officials will soon be provided with hybrid electric cars in another effort to go green

Govt in talks with Proton to supply hybrid cars to its officials
By STEPHEN THEN
stephenthen@thestar.com.my

MIRI: Government officials will soon be provided with hybrid electric cars in another effort to go green.

The Energy, Green Technology and Water Ministry is now in discussions with Proton Holdings Bhd to replace the current fleet of government vehicles with hybrid cars, said its minister Datuk Seri Peter Chin.

“If we really want to see the country go green, the Government must take the lead and show by example. We cannot keep telling the people and the private sector to go green if we do not do the same,” he told The Star yesterday, explaining the rationale behind the change.

A hybrid vehicle uses two or more distinct power sources to move the vehicle. It combines an internal combustion engine and one or more electric motors.

Chin said vehicles using electric engines could save up to 40% of fuel and also drastically cut down on carbon emission.

He pointed out that the abolishment of import and excise duties for electric vehicles under Budget 2011 would see a big drop in prices.

“The present price of electric vehicles manufactured by Toyota is about RM175,000 in Malaysia because of the import and excise duties.

“Now, with the abolishment of these duties, we expect the price to go down by a big margin in Malaysia soon,” he said.

On Friday, during the tabling of Budget 2011, Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak said the Government would continue to provide incentives in a move to ensure sustainable development.

This would include granting exemption to full import duty and 50% excise duty to franchise holders of hybrid cars and hybrid electric motorcycles up to Dec 31.

To spur ownership of hybrid cars, import duty and excise duty exemption will be extended until Dec 31 with excise duty given full exemption.

Chin said the talks with Proton was focused on how it could supply cars with electric engines for his ministry, the Prime Minister’s Department, Natural Resources and Environment Ministry, and the Science, Technology and Innovation Ministry.

The exercise would be extended later to other ministries and departments, he said.

However, he declined to set a target date as discussions with Proton were ongoing.

Chin said ordinary Malaysians would also be able to afford electric cars when more models were imported from other countries.

The Government, he said, could also possibly source for new models of hybrid electric cars from the United States.

At present, Honda and Toyota have models of hybrid cars in Malaysia.

More on: http://thestar.com.my/news/

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