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Muscle Spasm And Muscle Cramps 

Photo by gastroscopy showing ulcer in the antrum area of the stomach.
Photo by gastroscopy showing ulcer in the antrum area of the stomach (lower area).

What Is A Gastric Ulcer?

[dropcap]G astric ulcer is a painful stomach disorder characterized by an open sore involving the mucosa lining and deeper muscle layer of the stomach.

Gastric ulcer is associated with lymphocytic gastritis which is inflammation of the mucosal lining of the stomach. The thick mucosal lining normally protects the stomach from the erosive action of stomach acid.

Q: How do ulcers develop?

A: Ulcers develop if  hydrochloric acid secreted by the gastric glands of the stomach for the purpose of digesting food damages the normally resistant mucosal walls of the stomach. In the reverse, ulcers may be accompanied by achlorhydria (insufficient acid production).

Damage occurs when there is a predisposing factor that alters the health of the mucosal lining. The most common cause is infection with a bacteria called h. pylori bacter, stress and chronic use of the pain relievers aspirin and non-steroidal drugs like ibuprofen.

Smoking tocacco and consuming alcohol aggravate an ulcer but do not cause it to develop.

The most common location for ulcer formation is along the stomach antrum which is the area of the stomach before the pylorus, the lower region that empties liquid stomach contents into the small intestine.

What Is A Gastric Ulcer In Celiac Disease and/or Gluten Sensitivity?

Non-Alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease

Smooth muscle. Courtesy pathguy.com
Smooth Muscle. Courtesy pathguy.com

What Are Anti-Endomysium Antibodies?

[dropcap]A nti-endomysium antibodies (EmA) are connective tissue autoantibodies produced in persons who have inherited the genes for celiac disease, an autoimmune disease, and are reacting to gluten in their diet.

Autoantibodies are abnormal in that they attack the body’s own tissue.

Q: What is endomysium?

A: Endomysium is the delicate connective tissue that surrounds individual muscle fibers. The autoantigen, or target, that stimulates the autoimmune response is the naturally occuring enzyme in endomysium called tissue transglutaminase (tTG), or more specifically tranglutaminase-2 (TG2). Anti-tissue transglutaminase antibodies recognize the same antigen as EmA, from which they differ in terms of detection method.

Anti-endomysium antibodies (EmA) are tested by the indirect immunofluorescence method and directed against “reticulin-like” fibres in connective tissue around smooth muscle fibres in the esophagus, liver, stomach, and bladder of monkeys, in the sections of the jejunum and kidneys of rats and in sections of the human umbilical cord. In comparison, for the determination of anti-tissue transglutaminase IgA and IgG antibodies, ELISA with human extractive or recombinant transglutaminase is recommended.1

EmA‐binding patterns in serum samples from patients with celiac disease have proved to be exclusively TG2‐targeted and the correlation between EmA and TG2 antibodies is therefore good. Evidence shows that celiac autoantibodies are produced in the small‐bowel mucosa.2

What Are Anti-Endomysium Antibodies In Celiac Disease and/or Gluten Sensitivity?

Sources:
  1. Trigoni E, Tsirogianni A, Pipi E, Mantzaris G, Papasteriades C. Celiac disease in adult patients: specific autoantibodies in the diagnosis, monitoring, and screening. Autoimmune Dis. 2014;2014:623514. doi: 10.1155/2014/623514. []
  2. Salmi TT, Collin P, Korponay-Szabó IR, Laurila K, Partanen J, Huhtala H, Király R, Lorand L, Reunala T, Mäki M, Kaukinen K. Endomysial antibody‐negative coeliac disease: clinical characteristics and intestinal autoantibody deposits.Gut. 2006 Dec;55(12):1746-53. []