SURGICAL AND PATHOLOGIC ASPECTS OF PROTEIN LOSING GASTROPATHY
- 1 January 1978
- journal article
- research article
- Vol. 147 (1), 33-37
Abstract
The mechanism of protein loss from the gastric wall was investigated in patients with Menetrier''s disease, gastric polyps and carcinoma of the stomach. In Menetrier''s disease, plasma protein was lost as glycoprotein in the gastric juice secreted from proliferated foveolar cells. Some of the gastric polyps also showed pathologic findings similar to that of Menetrier''s disease. As a treatment for the diffuse type of Menetrier''s disease, subtotal gastrectomy was recommended by presenting enough recovery from hypoproteinemia. A small amount of protein lost from the remaining portion of the stomach may be almost completely digested and reabsorbed from the intestine. In instances of carcinoma of the stomach, the mechanism of protein loss was speculated to be loss of lymph, blood or other interstitial fluids from opened capillaries of the cancerous surface. Complete removal of the carcinoma results in recovery from hypoproteinemia.This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- Catabolism and Distribution of Serum-albumin in the DogActa Medica Scandinavica, 1965
- Giant Hypertrophy of the Gastric Rugae (Menetrier’s Disease) Associated With Severe Hypoproteinemia Relieved Only by Total Gastrectomy: Report of CaseGastroenterology, 1950