Campylobacter pylori subsp. mustelae was cultured from both normal and inflamed gastric mucosa of ferrets. Examination of neonatal, juvenile, and adult ferrets established that the gastric mucosa in the majority of preweanling (age, less than 6 weeks) ferrets sampled were not colonized with C. pylori subsp. mustelae, whereas the gastric mucosa of 100% of adult ferrets were colonized with this gastric organism. C. pylori subsp. mustelae was isolated from the gastric mucosa on a sequential basis from nine ferrets during a several-month period, inferring either persistent colonization or frequent reinfection with C. pylori subsp. mustelae.
A retrospective review of 19 patients with documented myeloid metaplasia undergoing, elective splenectomy during the past ten years at the Peter Bent Brigham Hospital is presented. The primary indications for splenectomy in 17 of these 19 were either hypersplenism or symptomatic splenomegaly. Eighteen of the 19 underwent both 59Fe-ferrokinetic studies and 51Cr-sequestration studies or, alternatively, 111In-marrow scintigraphy as a part of their routine preoperative evaluation. The death from sepsis of one patient six weeks post-operatively, whose marrow function was poor and whose level of splenic sequestration was minimal, confirms the efficacy of these studies in the preoperative prediction of hematologic response to splenectomy. Eighteen of the 19 patients benefited from the operation in terms of symptomatic relief and/or hematologic improvement, although surgery presumably did nothing to prolong survival in these patients. We conclude that splenectomy is indicated as a palliative maneuver for carefully selected patients with myeloid metaplasia without prohibitive operative risk, provided the criteria for selection of patients are adhered to and the surgeon and hematologist work together as a team.
To study the effects of chronic bile reflux on the mammalian gastric mucosa, the ferret model was chosen for its practical aptitude and for its similarity to human gastric anatomy and physiology. A technique was first perfected for endoscopically directed gastric mucosal biopsy in the ferret. Subsequently, a surgical model of maximal enterogastric reflux (MR) and a control model of minimal reflux or "nonreflux" (NR) were developed. A stable population of 9 MR and 9 NR ferrets surviving 1-3 years has been established. All 18 animals, plus 6 nonoperative control animals, have undergone multiple repeat endoscopy and gastric biopsy without complication. The surgical and endoscopic techniques, with preliminary findings, are described.
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