Helicobacter pylori in children.
Sullivan PB.
Helicobacter pylori is the major cause of antral gastritis in children, however, it is not always associated with symptoms. The exception to this occurs in duodenal ulcer disease with which H. pylori is linked in children albeit less strongly than in adults. Duodenal ulcers do not recur in older children following eradication of H. pylori. The importance of asymptomatic carriage of H. pylori in children, particularly in relation to the duration of this infection and the subsequent development of gastric cancer, remain to be established. Helicobacter pylori is associated with both hypochlorhydria and persistent diarrhoea in children in developing countries, but the significance of this association is still unknown. Although there is no consensus on the optimal regimen for treating H. pylori infection in children, dual therapy with amoxycillin and bismuth subcitrate for 2 weeks followed by monotherapy with bismuth subcitrate for a further 6 weeks will eradicate H. pylori infection in the majority of children. Those who relapse may be treated with a repeat course plus metronidazole for 4 weeks. Compliance with such regimens is a problem and shorter treatment courses that are equally effective in children need to be defined. Similarly, studies are required on the influence of the intrafamilial reservoir of H. pylori infection on relapse after treatment and the need for whole family eradication therapy.