Literature DB >> 9500691

Time dependent changes in the concentration and type of bacterial sequences found in cholesterol gallstones.

A Swidsinski1, M Khilkin, H Pahlig, S Swidsinski, F Priem.   

Abstract

The role of bacteria in gallstone formation could not be conclusively evaluated until bacterial presence or absence in a stone was consistently shown. Cultural bacteriologic investigations at the time of cholecystectomy, however, led to the assumption that cholesterol gallstones were free of bacteria. In this study, we used a culture independent, molecular genetic approach to detect, quantify, and identify bacteria in cholesterol gallstones from 100 patients at the time of cholecystectomy and 6 months following. Bacterial growth was recorded in the culture in 9 of 100 gallstones; bacterial DNA, however, was detected in 82 of 91 sterile gallstones. High concentrations corresponding to between 10(6) to 10(7) bacteria/g were detected in 11 stones and low concentrations of 10(5) bacteria/g were detected in 71 sterile stones. The infection in stones with a positive bacterial culture was characterized by the predominance of single bacterial sequence(s) of the bacteria cultured. A similar predominance, indicating a recent infection, was found in sterile gallstones with low DNA concentrations. A high diversity of non-repeating bacterial sequences, possibly arising from previous overlapping infections, was found in sterile gallstones with high concentrations of bacterial DNA. After 6 months concentrations of bacterial DNA fell significantly in all groups of gallstones. As bacterial DNA is quickly destroyed upon storage, but is nevertheless readily found in most gallstones at the time of cholecystectomy, there must be a mechanism by which it is replenished. One such mechanism is the frequently reoccurring, possibly self-terminating infection and another one is the permanent colonization of the gallstone with bacteria at low concentrations. Both can promote cholecystolithiasis.

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Year:  1998        PMID: 9500691     DOI: 10.1002/hep.510270304

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Hepatology        ISSN: 0270-9139            Impact factor:   17.425


  11 in total

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4.  Cytokine single nucleotide polymorphisms in patients' with gallstone: dose TGF-β gene variants affect gallstone formation?

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6.  Bacteria entombed in the center of cholesterol gallstones induce fewer infectious manifestations than bacteria in the matrix of pigment stones.

Authors:  Lygia Stewart; J McLeod Griffiss; Gary A Jarvis; Lawrence W Way
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7.  Predictors of gallstone composition in 1025 symptomatic gallstones from Northern Germany.

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8.  Expression of cytokine and chemokine mRNA and secretion of tumor necrosis factor-alpha by gallbladder epithelial cells: response to bacterial lipopolysaccharides.

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9.  A comparative study of gallstones from children and adults using FTIR spectroscopy and fluorescence microscopy.

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10.  Gut microbiota dysbiosis and bacterial community assembly associated with cholesterol gallstones in large-scale study.

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