Changes in the prevalence of dyspepsia and Helicobacter pylori infection after 17 years: The Sørreisa gastrointestinal disorder study

被引:0
作者
Anne Mette Asfeldt
Bjørn Straume
Sonja Eriksson Steigen
Maja-Lisa Løchen
Jon Florholmen
Bjørn Bernersen
Roar Johnsen
Eyvind J. Paulssen
机构
[1] University of Tromsø,Department of Community Medicine
[2] University of Tromsø,Department of Medical Biology
[3] University Hospital of North Norway,Department of Cardiology
[4] University of Tromsø,Department of Clinical Medicine
[5] University Hospital of North Norway,Department of Gastroenterology
[6] Helgeland Hospital,Department of Public Health and General Practice
[7] Norwegian University of Science and Technology,undefined
来源
European Journal of Epidemiology | 2008年 / 23卷
关键词
Cohort studies; Dyspepsia; Health expenditures;
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摘要
Dyspepsia and Helicobacter pylori infection are two important public health issues in the field of gastroenterology, generating high expenditures in diagnosis and treatment. A causal relationship between H. pylori and dyspepsia is still debated. The aim of this study was to address changes in the prevalence of, and association between, dyspepsia and H. pylori infection in a general population. The study took place in the municipality of Sørreisa in Northern Norway. Data were collected in 1987 and 2004. The study included questionnaires on gastrointestinal disorders and risk factors, as well as H. pylori assessment. The prevalence of dyspepsia in 2004 was 31.9% in men and 31.7% in women (compared with 30.7 and 26.3% in 1987). In 2004, the prevalence of H. pylori infection in men with/without dyspepsia was 20.3/26.7% (compared with 47.0/32.7% in 1987), whereas the prevalence of H. pylori infection in women with/without dyspepsia was 31.3/20.8% (compared with 50.0/40.7% in 1987). Since 1987, the prevalence of H. pylori has decreased independently of dyspepsia, most pronounced in the younger age groups, thus indicating a cohort effect. Our findings of a decreasing prevalence of H. pylori, a persistently high prevalence of dyspepsia, and an uneven distribution of H. pylori infection with regard to dyspepsia in men and women, question the understanding of a causal relationship between dyspepsia and H. pylori.
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