Gastritis historical perspective: Difference between revisions
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==Overview== | ==Overview== | ||
In 1728, a German physician named Georg Ernst Stahl first used the term "gastritis" to describe inflammation of the inner lining of the stomach. | In 1728, a German physician named Georg Ernst Stahl first used the term "gastritis" to describe inflammation of the inner lining of the stomach. In 1982, Robin Warren and Barry Marshall discovered Helicobacter pylori which further led to the identification and classification of different gastritides. | ||
==Historical Perspective== | ==Historical Perspective== |
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Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1] Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief:
Overview
In 1728, a German physician named Georg Ernst Stahl first used the term "gastritis" to describe inflammation of the inner lining of the stomach. In 1982, Robin Warren and Barry Marshall discovered Helicobacter pylori which further led to the identification and classification of different gastritides.
Historical Perspective
- In 1728, George Stahl: first noted inflammation of the inner lining of the stomach as “gastritis”
- In 1771, Giovanni Morgagni: described "erosive" and "ulcerating gastritis"
- In 1855, Baron Carl von Rokitansky: described "hypertrophic gastritis"
- In 1870, Samuel Fenwick: described gastric atrophy
- In 1944, Warren & Meissner: described intestinal metaplasia as feature of chronic gastritis
- In 1947, Sir Ian Jeffreys Wood: first gastric biopsy done with semiflexible biopsy tube, "Gastritis" defined by histopathology
- In 1956, Louis Streifeneder and Eddy Palmer: Introduction of flexible fibre optic endoscope
- In 1982, Robin Warren and Barry Marshall discovered Helicobacter pylori which further led to the identification and classification of different gastritides.[1]
- In 1990, A New Classification of Gastritis called the Sydney System was presented to the World Congress of Gastroenterology in Sydney and was later published as six papers in the Journal of Gastroenterology and Hepatology. [2] [3]
- In 1994, at the International Workshop on the Histopathology of Gastritis held at Houston, The updated Sydney System for the classification and grading of gastritis was introduced.[3]
References
- ↑ Hellstrom PM (2006). "This year's Nobel Prize to gastroenterology: Robin Warren and Barry Marshall awarded for their discovery of Helicobacter pylori as pathogen in the gastrointestinal tract". World J Gastroenterol. 12 (19): 3126–7. PMC 4124396. PMID 16718802.
- ↑ Sipponen P, Price AB (2011). "The Sydney System for classification of gastritis 20 years ago". J Gastroenterol Hepatol. 26 Suppl 1: 31–4. doi:10.1111/j.1440-1746.2010.06536.x. PMID 21199511.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 Stolte M, Meining A (2001). "The updated Sydney system: classification and grading of gastritis as the basis of diagnosis and treatment". Can J Gastroenterol. 15 (9): 591–8. PMID 11573102.