Peptic ulcer disease - Etiology and Risk Factors
Understand the roles of Helicobacter pylori, NSAIDs, and lifestyle/stress factors in causing and increasing risk for peptic ulcer disease.
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Which enzyme does Helicobacter pylori produce to create a locally alkaline environment?
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Summary
Understanding the Causes of Peptic Ulcer Disease
Introduction
Peptic ulcer disease results from an imbalance between factors that damage the gastrointestinal mucosa and factors that protect it. For nearly a century, medical teaching blamed ulcers on stress, spicy foods, and alcohol—theories that have largely been disproven by modern research. Today, we understand that Helicobacter pylori infection and nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) account for the vast majority of peptic ulcer cases. Understanding the mechanisms behind these causes is essential for diagnosis, treatment, and prevention.
Helicobacter pylori Infection
Helicobacter pylori is the leading cause of peptic ulcer disease worldwide. This gram-negative bacterium colonizes the stomach and duodenum, and its presence dramatically increases ulcer risk.
How H. pylori Causes Ulcers
The bacterium survives the hostile acidic environment through a clever mechanism: it produces the enzyme urease, which breaks down urea into ammonia and carbon dioxide. This creates a locally alkaline microenvironment around the bacterial cells, allowing H. pylori to survive and replicate.
As the bacteria colonize the mucosa, they trigger an inflammatory response through virulence factors—particularly CagA, PicB, and VacA. These proteins damage the epithelial barrier and recruit immune cells that cause chronic mucosal inflammation. This inflammation is the key link to ulcer formation.
Location-Dependent Effects
Here's an important distinction: depending on the location of H. pylori colonization, the inflammatory response can lead to either decreased or increased acid secretion:
Gastric ulcers typically develop when inflammation preferentially affects acid-secreting cells, leading to decreased acid production
Duodenal ulcers typically develop when inflammation primarily damages antral mucosa, paradoxically leading to increased acid production in the duodenum
This explains why the same pathogen can cause different types of ulcers in different patients.
Non-Steroidal Anti-Inflammatory Drugs (NSAIDs)
NSAIDs are the second leading cause of peptic ulcer disease, accounting for most NSAID-related complications. Users of NSAIDs face a four-fold increase in ulcer risk compared to non-users, with aspirin alone doubling the risk.
Mechanism of NSAID-Induced Ulcers
NSAIDs don't work by increasing stomach acid—rather, they impair the stomach's protective mechanisms. Here's how:
NSAIDs inhibit cyclooxygenase-1 (COX-1), an enzyme critical for producing prostaglandins. Prostaglandins are hormone-like molecules that protect the mucosa by:
Stimulating mucus secretion to coat the stomach lining
Promoting bicarbonate secretion to neutralize acid locally
Maintaining adequate mucosal blood flow, which delivers oxygen and nutrients needed for repair
When NSAIDs reduce prostaglandin synthesis, all three of these protective mechanisms fail simultaneously. The unprotected mucosa becomes vulnerable to acid damage, even at normal acid levels.
COX-2 Selective Inhibitors
You may encounter mentions of COX-2 selective NSAIDs (such as celecoxib). These drugs were developed to reduce ulcer risk because COX-2 is primarily involved in inflammation rather than mucosal protection. While COX-2 selective NSAIDs do cause fewer ulcers than non-selective NSAIDs, they can paradoxically delay healing of existing ulcers—an important clinical consideration when prescribing to high-risk patients.
Stress-Related Ulcers
A distinction exists between two types of stress and ulcer formation:
Acute physiological stress ulcers can develop rapidly in critically ill patients—those in intensive care with severe burns, major surgery, sepsis, or organ failure. These "stress ulcers" likely result from decreased mucosal blood flow and increased acid secretion during the acute stress response.
In contrast, chronic psychological stress is no longer considered a primary cause of peptic ulcer disease. While psychological stress was once blamed for ulcers, this belief has been largely abandoned as H. pylori and NSAIDs were identified as the true culprits. However, psychological stress may still exacerbate ulcer development in people who already have H. pylori infection or regularly use NSAIDs.
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Other Causes and Historical Notes
Uncommon Causes
Zollinger-Ellison syndrome, caused by gastrin-producing tumors, leads to severe, often multiple and refractory ulcers. This occurs because the tumor secretes excessive gastrin hormone, which stimulates acid production far beyond normal levels. While important to know, this cause is rare.
Diet and Lifestyle Factors
Smoking may increase ulcer risk in some individuals, though its exact role remains unclear. Spicy foods and alcohol, once blamed as primary ulcer causes, are not primary causative factors—though both smoking and alcohol may delay healing and increase relapse rates in patients with existing ulcers.
Historical Context
Understanding the historical evolution of ulcer etiology is helpful: physicians once universally attributed ulcers to stress and diet, leading to dietary restrictions and antacids as the main treatments. The discovery that stomach acid played a role led to acid-suppressing medications. However, these treatments didn't prevent recurrence in many patients. Only with the discovery of H. pylori in the 1980s did the true picture emerge: most ulcers were due to infection or NSAIDs, not stress or diet. This historical shift explains why older literature may still emphasize stress and why some patients hold outdated beliefs about their condition.
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Summary
The two major causes of peptic ulcer disease are fundamentally different:
H. pylori infection causes ulcers through bacterial virulence factors that trigger mucosal inflammation, with location-dependent effects on acid production
NSAIDs cause ulcers by inhibiting protective prostaglandin synthesis, leaving the mucosa defenseless against acid
Recognizing these mechanisms is critical because they require different treatment approaches: H. pylori infection requires antibiotics, while NSAID-related ulcers require acid suppression and prostaglandin replacement (misoprostol) in addition to discontinuing the NSAID. Stress ulcers in critically ill patients require different management altogether.
Flashcards
Which enzyme does Helicobacter pylori produce to create a locally alkaline environment?
Urease
How does Helicobacter pylori-induced inflammation lead to a duodenal ulcer?
Increased acid production
By how many times does NSAID use increase the risk of ulcers compared to non-users?
Four-fold
What is the specific effect of Aspirin on ulcer risk?
It doubles the risk
Which enzyme do NSAIDs inhibit to reduce protective prostaglandin synthesis?
Cyclo-oxygenase-1 (COX-1)
What are three physiological consequences of reduced prostaglandins in the stomach?
Diminished mucus secretion
Diminished bicarbonate secretion
Impaired mucosal blood flow
What is the clinical disadvantage of using COX-2-selective NSAIDs like celecoxib despite fewer new ulcers?
They can delay healing of existing ulcers
What are the two general guidelines for prescribing the safest possible course of NSAIDs?
Use the lowest effective dose
Use for the shortest possible duration
What term describes ulcers caused by severe intensive-care illness?
Stress ulcers
What is the current scientific view on chronic psychological stress as a primary cause of ulcers?
It is no longer considered a primary cause (though it may exacerbate other factors)
What underlying condition causes multiple refractory ulcers in Zollinger–Ellison syndrome?
Gastrin-producing tumors
What are two negative impacts of smoking and excessive alcohol on existing peptic ulcers?
Delayed ulcer healing
Higher relapse rates
Are spicy foods considered a primary cause of peptic ulcer formation?
No
Quiz
Peptic ulcer disease - Etiology and Risk Factors Quiz Question 1: Which bacterium is recognized as a major cause of peptic ulcer disease?
- Helicobacter pylori (correct)
- Escherichia coli
- Staphylococcus aureus
- Candida albicans
Peptic ulcer disease - Etiology and Risk Factors Quiz Question 2: Historically, physicians thought peptic ulcers were caused by which combination of factors?
- Stress, spicy food, and alcohol (correct)
- Helicobacter pylori infection
- Non‑steroidal anti‑inflammatory drug use
- Genetic predisposition
Which bacterium is recognized as a major cause of peptic ulcer disease?
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Key Concepts
Ulcer Causes and Risk Factors
Helicobacter pylori
Peptic ulcer disease
Nonsteroidal anti‑inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs)
Stress ulcer
Zollinger–Ellison syndrome
Smoking
Gastric Protection Mechanisms
Prostaglandins
COX‑2‑selective NSAIDs
Gastric acid secretion
Definitions
Helicobacter pylori
A spiral‑shaped bacterium that colonizes the stomach lining and is a primary cause of gastric and duodenal ulcers.
Peptic ulcer disease
A condition characterized by erosions in the stomach or duodenal mucosa that penetrate the muscularis mucosa, often causing pain and bleeding.
Nonsteroidal anti‑inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs)
A class of analgesic medications that inhibit cyclo‑oxygenase enzymes, reducing prostaglandin synthesis and increasing ulcer risk.
Stress ulcer
An acute gastric or duodenal lesion that develops in critically ill patients due to severe physiological stress.
Zollinger–Ellison syndrome
A rare disorder caused by gastrin‑secreting neuroendocrine tumors, leading to excessive gastric acid production and refractory ulcers.
Prostaglandins
Lipid compounds that protect the gastric mucosa by stimulating mucus and bicarbonate secretion and maintaining mucosal blood flow.
COX‑2‑selective NSAIDs
Anti‑inflammatory drugs that preferentially inhibit cyclo‑oxygenase‑2, aiming to reduce gastrointestinal toxicity while providing pain relief.
Gastric acid secretion
The process by which parietal cells release hydrochloric acid into the stomach lumen, essential for digestion but a key factor in ulcer formation when unregulated.
Smoking
A lifestyle factor that can impair ulcer healing and increase the likelihood of ulcer recurrence.