Background: The Helicobacter pylori infection is linked to chronic urticaria in nearly 60% of patients. We studied clinicoepidemiologic features in patients with chronic urticaria with and without H. pylori infection.… Click to show full abstract
Background: The Helicobacter pylori infection is linked to chronic urticaria in nearly 60% of patients. We studied clinicoepidemiologic features in patients with chronic urticaria with and without H. pylori infection. Methods: Endoscopic antral biopsy for the rapid urease test (RUT) and histopathology, and serum IgG ELISA for H. pylori infection were performed in 150 patients (male:female ratio 1:2.4) of chronic urticaria aged 18-68 years. Clinicoepidemiologic features including age, gender, age of onset and duration, frequency and distribution of wheals, urticaria severity score, and systemic symptoms were analyzed in patients with and without H. pylori. The results of serum IgG ELISA for H. pylori were compared with 106 age- and gender-matched healthy adult controls. Results: The RUT in 84 patients (56%), histopathology in 76 patients (50.6%), and H. pylori IgG ELISA in 94 patients (62.6%) were positive. H. pylori IgG ELISA was positive only in 35 (33%) controls, suggesting that chronic urticaria patients were more likely to have asymptomatic H. pylori infection than normal controls. Although not statistically significant, patients with H. pylori had a higher mean urticaria severity score, number of urticaria/angioedema episodes per year, and involvement of more body sites, particularly the scalp, palms, and soles. The constitutional or gastrointestinal symptoms were statistically higher in patients with H. pylori infection than those without it. Conclusion: A subset of chronic urticaria patients appears to have asymptomatic H. pylori infection. However, its implications in chronicity, recurrences, the severity of urticaria, other systemic manifestations, and management remains conjectural in view of 33% of controls also having positive H. pylori ELISA and the endemicity of infection in developing countries.
               
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