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Justification of Genetic Factors for Predicting the Risk of Acute Bleeding in Peptic Ulcer Disease

PAI genotyping for the G43A and 4G/5G polymorphisms was performed in 60 patients with peptic ulcer disease: 12 with an uncomplicated ulcer, 5 with perforation, the rest with ongoing bleeding. Fourteen patients had recurrent bleeding. The 5G/5G and G43A genotypes were not detected in patients with un...

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Autores principales: Grynchuk, Fedir Vasilyevich, Dutka, Ivan Ivanovich, Panchuk, Iryna Ihorivna, Volkov, Roman Anatolyevich, Sheremet, Michael Ivanovich, Maksymyuk, Vitaliy Vasilyevich, Tarabanchuk, Volodymyr Volodymyrovich, Bilyk, Ihor Ivanovich, Myshkovskii, Yuriy Mykolayovych
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Carol Davila University Press 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7378332/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32742523
http://dx.doi.org/10.25122/jml-2020-0041
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author Grynchuk, Fedir Vasilyevich
Dutka, Ivan Ivanovich
Panchuk, Iryna Ihorivna
Volkov, Roman Anatolyevich
Sheremet, Michael Ivanovich
Maksymyuk, Vitaliy Vasilyevich
Tarabanchuk, Volodymyr Volodymyrovich
Bilyk, Ihor Ivanovich
Myshkovskii, Yuriy Mykolayovych
author_facet Grynchuk, Fedir Vasilyevich
Dutka, Ivan Ivanovich
Panchuk, Iryna Ihorivna
Volkov, Roman Anatolyevich
Sheremet, Michael Ivanovich
Maksymyuk, Vitaliy Vasilyevich
Tarabanchuk, Volodymyr Volodymyrovich
Bilyk, Ihor Ivanovich
Myshkovskii, Yuriy Mykolayovych
author_sort Grynchuk, Fedir Vasilyevich
collection PubMed
description PAI genotyping for the G43A and 4G/5G polymorphisms was performed in 60 patients with peptic ulcer disease: 12 with an uncomplicated ulcer, 5 with perforation, the rest with ongoing bleeding. Fourteen patients had recurrent bleeding. The 5G/5G and G43A genotypes were not detected in patients with uncomplicated ulcers. All patients with ulcer perforation had the G43G genotype, 60% of patients had the 4G/4G genotype, and the rest of them had the 4G/5G and 5G/5G genotypes. The number of carriers of the 5G allele (86.05%) was higher in patients with bleeding than in ones with ulcer perforation (p=0.036) and ulcer without bleeding (p=0.021, χ2=5.32). The number of carriers of the 5G allele was higher in patients with recurrent bleeding (92.86%) than those without any relapses (82.76%) but there were no statistically significant differences (p=0.27, χ2=0.802). The G43G homozygous genotype was found in 94.12% of patients with peptic ulcer without bleeding, which was statistically significantly higher (p=0.02) than the ones with bleeding. The A allele was observed in 27.91% of patients with bleeding and 8.33% patients without any bleeding (p=0.05). The number of carriers of the A allele in patients with recurrent bleeding was statistically significantly higher than in ones without any bleeding (p=0.046). The 5G and A alleles in patients with a peptic ulcer can be used to predict the course of peptic ulcer disease and can be regarded as a predictor of the risk of bleeding relapse.
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spelling pubmed-73783322020-07-31 Justification of Genetic Factors for Predicting the Risk of Acute Bleeding in Peptic Ulcer Disease Grynchuk, Fedir Vasilyevich Dutka, Ivan Ivanovich Panchuk, Iryna Ihorivna Volkov, Roman Anatolyevich Sheremet, Michael Ivanovich Maksymyuk, Vitaliy Vasilyevich Tarabanchuk, Volodymyr Volodymyrovich Bilyk, Ihor Ivanovich Myshkovskii, Yuriy Mykolayovych J Med Life Original Article PAI genotyping for the G43A and 4G/5G polymorphisms was performed in 60 patients with peptic ulcer disease: 12 with an uncomplicated ulcer, 5 with perforation, the rest with ongoing bleeding. Fourteen patients had recurrent bleeding. The 5G/5G and G43A genotypes were not detected in patients with uncomplicated ulcers. All patients with ulcer perforation had the G43G genotype, 60% of patients had the 4G/4G genotype, and the rest of them had the 4G/5G and 5G/5G genotypes. The number of carriers of the 5G allele (86.05%) was higher in patients with bleeding than in ones with ulcer perforation (p=0.036) and ulcer without bleeding (p=0.021, χ2=5.32). The number of carriers of the 5G allele was higher in patients with recurrent bleeding (92.86%) than those without any relapses (82.76%) but there were no statistically significant differences (p=0.27, χ2=0.802). The G43G homozygous genotype was found in 94.12% of patients with peptic ulcer without bleeding, which was statistically significantly higher (p=0.02) than the ones with bleeding. The A allele was observed in 27.91% of patients with bleeding and 8.33% patients without any bleeding (p=0.05). The number of carriers of the A allele in patients with recurrent bleeding was statistically significantly higher than in ones without any bleeding (p=0.046). The 5G and A alleles in patients with a peptic ulcer can be used to predict the course of peptic ulcer disease and can be regarded as a predictor of the risk of bleeding relapse. Carol Davila University Press 2020 /pmc/articles/PMC7378332/ /pubmed/32742523 http://dx.doi.org/10.25122/jml-2020-0041 Text en ©Carol Davila University Press This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/), which permits unrestricted use and redistribution provided that the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Original Article
Grynchuk, Fedir Vasilyevich
Dutka, Ivan Ivanovich
Panchuk, Iryna Ihorivna
Volkov, Roman Anatolyevich
Sheremet, Michael Ivanovich
Maksymyuk, Vitaliy Vasilyevich
Tarabanchuk, Volodymyr Volodymyrovich
Bilyk, Ihor Ivanovich
Myshkovskii, Yuriy Mykolayovych
Justification of Genetic Factors for Predicting the Risk of Acute Bleeding in Peptic Ulcer Disease
title Justification of Genetic Factors for Predicting the Risk of Acute Bleeding in Peptic Ulcer Disease
title_full Justification of Genetic Factors for Predicting the Risk of Acute Bleeding in Peptic Ulcer Disease
title_fullStr Justification of Genetic Factors for Predicting the Risk of Acute Bleeding in Peptic Ulcer Disease
title_full_unstemmed Justification of Genetic Factors for Predicting the Risk of Acute Bleeding in Peptic Ulcer Disease
title_short Justification of Genetic Factors for Predicting the Risk of Acute Bleeding in Peptic Ulcer Disease
title_sort justification of genetic factors for predicting the risk of acute bleeding in peptic ulcer disease
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7378332/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32742523
http://dx.doi.org/10.25122/jml-2020-0041
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