Bulbit: types, causes, symptoms, diagnosis, treatment, complications, prevention and prognosis

Bulbit - what is it? Symptoms and treatment options for gastric bulbitis

In general, gastric bulbitis is always an inflammation of the duodenal bulb; the question arises - why then is the disease called gastric bulbitis? The fact is that the bulb is closely adjacent to the stomach and for simplicity this name is adopted. At the same time, several types or types of bulbitis are distinguished depending on the form of the course and the characteristic features of inflammation.

Most often, bulbitis is a consequence of chronic gastritis with high or low acidity. The weakly alkaline environment in the duodenum is created mainly by secreting bicarbonates. They constantly neutralize the acidic food bolus that descends from the stomach directly into the intestine. With gastritis with high acidity (hyperacid), the food bolus has too low a pH (shifted to a more acidic side), which means that the alkaline environment can no longer cope with the load, and the delicate, poorly protected intestinal epithelium is damaged and inflamed.

What it is?

Bulbit is an inflammatory disease of the mucous membrane of the duodenum (duodenum) with localization of the pathological process in its bulbar section. The common bile duct, the pancreatic duct, opens into the duodenal bulb. It is in this section that the acidic contents of the stomach are neutralized, and digestion processes begin under the influence of pancreatic and liver enzymes.

In gastroenterology, there is a tendency to reduce the frequency of Helicobacter-dependent bulbitis, which is associated with effective eradication therapy, but the frequency of idiopathic forms (not associated with H. pylori) remains high. In this case, complications that arise can threaten the patient’s life and require surgical intervention.

Reasons for development

The main cause of bulbitis is Helicobacter. Normally, there is a balance between the factors that increase and decrease the acidity of the stomach contents entering the duodenum.

When this balance is disturbed, hydrochloric acid damages the mucous membrane of the duodenum, which creates favorable conditions for Helicobacter, which are adapted to exist in an acidic environment.

In addition, the reasons for the development of bulbitis are factors that reduce the protective properties of the mucous membrane:

  • immunity disorders,
  • severe concomitant diseases,
  • genetic, psycho-emotional and constitutional prerequisites.

Less commonly, bulbitis occurs when:

  • Crohn's disease,
  • Zollinger-Ellison syndrome,
  • celiac disease;
  • giardiasis;
  • infection with worms;
  • entry of a foreign body into the gastric cavity;
  • poor nutrition;
  • bad habits;
  • consumption of hot food and drinks;
  • gastritis;
  • abuse of fatty, salty, spicy foods;
  • food toxic infections.

Causes of erosive bulbitis:

  • taking large quantities of medications;
  • injuries and burns;
  • alcohol abuse and smoking;
  • postoperative consequences;
  • reduced immunity.

Causes of superficial bulbitis:

  • poor nutrition;
  • stress;
  • gastritis;
  • chronic peptic ulcers;
  • gastrointestinal infections;
  • influence of pathogenic bacteria.

Causes of the chronic form:

  • giardiasis;
  • infection with worms;
  • Crohn's disease.

Causes of the acute form:

  • severe poisoning;
  • medications;
  • alcohol abuse;
  • entry of a foreign body into the gastrointestinal tract.

Causes of inflammation of the duodenal bulb

Bulbit is often associated with gastritis. Therefore, the causes of this disease in many cases are similar:

  • Helicobacter pylori infection (especially for catarrhal bulbitis);
  • unhealthy diet (overeating, dry food, spicy, smoked, fried foods);
  • alcohol consumption;
  • too hot food;
  • taking certain medications, especially anti-inflammatory drugs, and chemicals (for example, acetic acid or alkalis).

Accidental or intentional ingestion of any objects can lead to focal bulbitis - what does this mean: a foreign body lingers in the bulb and compresses its wall, a local inflammatory reaction develops under and around it. Giardia and helminths can also cause inflammation of the bulb, especially in children.

Rarely, duodenal bulbitis becomes a manifestation of Crohn's disease. This pathology can affect any part of the digestive tract, from the oral cavity to the anus. In particular, Crohn's disease can begin to develop precisely in the duodenal bulb.

Classification

The classification of bulbitis is based on the form of the disease and the types of its manifestation. There are two forms - acute and chronic. If treatment is started in a timely manner, the disease is cured completely and without consequences. Otherwise, it takes a chronic course, which causes a lot of trouble for the patient. Types of the disease differ in manifestations, severity and consequences.

Surface

This is one of the easiest and most treatable types of disease. It is called superficial bulbitis because it affects only the mucous membrane. At the same time, it becomes inflamed, soreness and swelling are formed, which makes it difficult for digestive juices to exit into the duodenum. As a result, there is stagnation of bile and a lack of enzymes for complete digestion of food.

Superficial bulbitis has two forms - acute and chronic. The acute form is most often infectious in nature. Chronic is characterized by alternating periods of exacerbation and remission.

Catarrhal

Catarrhal bulbitis is a more severe stage of the long-lasting superficial form of bulbitis. It is distinguished not only by swelling and inflammation, but also by dilation of capillaries on the surface of the mucosa, impaired intestinal motility, reflux of stomach contents into the esophagus (reflux), and the release of a large amount of cloudy mucus. Seasonal exacerbations are typical for catarrhal bulbitis. A long asymptomatic period is possible. The provocation is usually spicy food, stress or alcohol.

Focal

The doctor makes a diagnosis of “focal bulbitis” if the lesions of the bulb are not isolated, but cover entire areas of the mucous membrane. They can spread both towards the intestines and towards the stomach. Clinical manifestations are not specific. They are also characteristic of peptic ulcer disease and erosive bulbitis. The focal form may be the result of hormonal imbalances in the body. Exacerbations are often caused by vitamin deficiency, prolonged fasting, and strict diets.

Erosive

With erosive bulbitis, deeper damage to the bulb tissue occurs, down to the muscle layer. Most often, the cause of erosion is Helicobacter in combination with gastritis. Erosion can also occur due to damage to the glands that produce secretions that neutralize gastric acid. Erosive bulbitis is divided into several types depending on the depth of the lesion.

The chronic form is usually painless, the patient experiences only discomfort after eating (a feeling of a full stomach). Sometimes at night there may be aching pain. Severe pain is felt upon palpation. With erosive-hemorrhagic bulbitis, there may be an admixture of blood in the stool. With timely and adequate treatment of erosions, the prognosis is favorable. In advanced episodes, they lead to the formation of ulcers.

Follicular

During fibrogastroduodenoscopy, small nodular formations - follicles - are visible on the inner surface of the bulb. In this way, the lymphatic vessels located in the wall of the duodenum react to inflammation. The causative agents of the infection are parasites – helminths and Giardia. The development of the disease is facilitated by poor hygiene, reduced immunity, a history of gastritis and dietary errors. Symptoms are characteristic of all types of disease. It often occurs in children as a result of incompletely treated gastritis. Follicular bulbitis responds well to treatment and has a favorable prognosis.

Erosive bulbit

This is an inflammation of the duodenum, on the walls of which erosive foci form. This can lead to destruction of the stomach walls. This type of stomach inflammation is provoked by irregular diet, constant stress and a genetic predisposition to diseases of the gastrointestinal tract.

Treatment of erosive bulbitis is carried out under the supervision of doctors, since neglected erosive bulbitis can have detrimental consequences for the body - gastric bleeding, the appearance of ulcers, and various kinds of complications in the gastrointestinal tract.

General symptoms of bulbitis

The main manifestations of acute bulbitis:

  • intense pain in the epigastric region;
  • nausea, vomiting;
  • pain on palpation in the stomach area;
  • general weakness, drowsiness;
  • decreased appetite;
  • increase in body temperature.

The most common symptoms of chronic inflammation are:

  • periodically occurring pain (“hungry”, night, early or late, diffuse girdling or clearly localized, in the epigastric region or in the hypochondrium, which depends on the clinical course of bulbitis), relieved by eating, antacid or antisecretory medications;
  • belching sour or rotten, possible belching of air;
  • tendency to constipation or diarrhea; unstable stools are also possible, manifested by alternating constipation and diarrhea;
  • pain on palpation in the epigastric zone;
  • heaviness in the epigastrium after eating;
  • flatulence, spastic pain in the abdominal area;
  • weight loss;
  • additional symptoms in the form of general weakness, sweating, palpitations, shortness of breath, tremor (possible with the neuroendocrine version of bulbitis).

In some cases, bulbitis can be asymptomatic, being detected accidentally during an endoscopic examination for other diseases or at the stage of complications.

Superficial bulbite

This is inflammation of the duodenal bulb, the mildest form of inflammation. The symptoms are the same as in most diseases of the gastrointestinal tract. Severe stabbing pain in the abdomen and in the navel area. The disease is manifested by vomiting and belching with a bitter aftertaste. Pain occurs an hour or two after eating or with a large time gap between meals. The main treatment is a therapeutic diet for a month, after which you can return to your usual diet.

Diagnostics

Diagnosis of any type of duodenal bulbitis is not particularly difficult, since each form of inflammation has characteristic symptoms. The most important thing during diagnosis is to determine the degree of damage to the mucous membrane, for this they use:

  • FEGDS;
  • X-ray of the stomach;
  • Ultrasound.

In addition, the following are carried out:

  • examining the patient and determining the intensity of expression of signs of the disease;
  • a general and biochemical blood test to determine its composition, since in bulbitis it is changed;
  • laboratory tests of gastric juice;
  • a breath test system that can detect infectious bacteria.

After receiving all the results of tests and images, as well as establishing the type of bulbitis of the stomach and duodenum, treatment methods are prescribed.

How to treat chronic bulbitis?

For chronic and catarrhal bulbitis, antibacterial therapy is prescribed, since this type of bulbitis develops, as a rule, due to Helicobacter pylori infection. Antibiotics are prescribed taking into account the sensitivity of the pathogen to them. These can be certain groups of antibiotics that act on the cell of the pathogen itself - Amoxicycline, Vilprafen, Summed, De-nol and others. Sometimes Metronidazole can be prescribed, but nowadays its effectiveness among potential “killers” of Helicobacter is disputed.

Also, with this type of bulbitis, a long-term diet is prescribed. In addition, you must stop smoking. Avoid stressful situations whenever possible. It is necessary to stop taking all kinds of food additives; they can also be a provoking factor for the exacerbation of catarrhal and chronic bulbitis. Also, in stressful situations, during the treatment of this type of bulbitis, sedatives and sedatives are prescribed.

You should understand and be psychologically prepared for the fact that you will have to reconsider your usual way of life, since the treatment will be complex and long-term.

Drug treatment

Treatment with medications can only be started after consultation with a gastroenterologist. The selection of medications is carried out based on the cause of bulbitis and the morphological form of the pathology. The following types of medications may be prescribed for therapy:

  1. Antacids. This group has proven to be effective when it comes to reducing acidity. As a rule, Gastal, Rennie, Almagel, Maalox are prescribed, which reduce the irritating effect that affects the gastric mucosa. Antisecretory agents such as Omeprazole and Ranitidine may also be prescribed.
  2. Painkillers. In the acute form of bulbitis, the doctor may prescribe No-shpa, Papaverine, Baralgin to reduce pain.
  3. In case of helminthic infestation, anthelmintic (anthelmintic) drugs will be prescribed: Suramin, Levamisole.
  4. When infected with bacteria, or when the hydrochloric acid barrier is weakened, antibacterial agents are prescribed. The appointment is based on microbiological and laboratory testing.
  5. Light sedatives help with the stress factor of gastric bulbitis.


Folk remedies

Traditional methods of treating bulbitis can be very effective, since the main cause of the pathology is inflammation. In addition, since bulbitis is often secondary, normalizing the function of neighboring organs improves the course of bulbitis. It is worth knowing, however, that in some conditions (infection, poisoning, immunodeficiency, radiation, diseases of the blood, kidneys, heart and other severe pathologies), traditional treatment is not only ineffective, but can also be dangerous.

To treat bulbitis, you can use the following medicinal herbs:

  • Collection No. 1. To prepare the tincture, you should take chamomile flowers, plantain leaf and peppermint (two parts of each herb), St. John's wort and yarrow herb (one part of each herb). Mix all herbs. One tablespoon of herbal mixture should be poured into 0.5 liters of boiling water. Leave to infuse for 1 hour. After this, the tincture must be strained. Take 2–3 days, a quarter glass every hour. After 3 days, drink half a glass 4 times a day before meals, and also before bed. The course of treatment with this collection is 2 weeks. The tincture has an anti-inflammatory, astringent, antimicrobial, hemostatic and wound-healing effect, and is used for acute bulbitis.
  • Collection No. 2. Take 10 parts of crushed rose hips and hawthorn fruits, 4 parts of chamomile flowers and calendula flowers, 5 parts of oat seeds and cudweed grass, 3 parts of plantain leaves and elecampane root, 1.5 parts of celandine grass and grass. centaury. Prepare and take in the same way as collection No. 1.
  • Collection No. 3. Take 2 parts of mint leaves and flax seeds, 3 parts of calendula flowers, licorice root, nettle leaves and blue cyanosis root, 4 parts of coltsfoot leaves, 1 part of fennel fruit and yarrow herb and 5 parts of dried grass and rose hips. Prepare and take as collection No. 1.

To treat bulbitis with giardiasis, you can use the following recipes:

  • Mix freshly prepared garlic juice in the amount of 10 - 15 drops with milk (the milk needs to be boiled, but should be drunk warm) and drink 2 - 3 times a day before meals.
  • Grate garlic and horseradish in equal parts (25 grams), mix to form a paste, add half a liter of vodka. The tincture should be kept for 10 days in a dark place (during this time you need to shake it periodically). After 10 days, the tincture should be filtered and taken one tablespoon 2 - 3 times a day half an hour before meals, washing the tincture with a sip of water.
  • A 1% eucalyptus solution should be diluted in 30 ml of water (2 tablespoons) and taken daily, 1 teaspoon 3 times a day, 30 - 40 minutes before meals.
  • Pour 1 teaspoon of corn silk into a glass of boiled water, leave for some time, then take 1 - 2 tablespoons 3 - 4 times a day.
  • Pumpkin seeds (recipe for adults) in the amount of 300 grams should be crushed in a mortar, add 50 - 60 ml of water, 50 - 100 mg of honey and mix. Take in small portions over an hour on an empty stomach. After the patient eats the entire mass, you should wait 3 hours and drink a laxative.

Medicinal teas for bulbitis can alleviate or eliminate the following symptoms:

  • stomach pain – cardamom seeds, Roman chamomile flowers, ground cinnamon bark, fennel seeds, ginger root, cinnamon root, valerian roots;
  • poor digestion and appetite – licorice root, mint leaves, sage flowers, yarrow flowers, fennel seeds;
  • irritability – chamomile (Roman or German), lemon balm leaves, valerian root, kava kava roots,
  • diarrhea – raspberry leaves;
  • nausea – ginger root.

Natural Medicines

Doctors recommend a combination of medications and home treatments. Traditional medicine has accumulated a large number of recipes that perfectly help cope with bulbitis.

Recovery will be accelerated by taking plantain juice with honey. The mixture not only relieves pain and inflammation, but also helps the mucous membrane to quickly recover. An infusion of chamomile and Icelandic moss has an anti-inflammatory effect. Cloves, tansy and wormwood will help cope with parasites. A good antiparasitic agent is birch (leaves), especially in combination with oregano and elecampane. St. John's wort tea and propolis tincture are useful. Erosive bulbitis is effectively treated with oak decoction.

Bulbit, especially in acute form, reduces the patient’s quality of life. This can be avoided, because the main risk factors depend on the person. Self-medication is unacceptable; careful diagnosis and doctor’s prescriptions are required depending on the examination results. With adequate treatment, the prognosis for life is favorable.

Nutrition rules and diet for bulbitis

We should also talk about diet during the treatment of bulbitis. This is a very important factor on the path to recovery.

Proper nutrition is necessary for every person. This is good. But, as a rule, it is not possible to monitor your diet, and most people do not even know what proper nutrition is. It is especially important for people suffering from inflammatory diseases of the gastrointestinal tract. Diet is not precisely the identity of the products that are approved for use, since all diseases are individual, like each organism.

A nutritionist, together with a gastroenterologist, will help you choose the right diet, which will need to be followed for a fairly long period of time - about six months. And even if the symptoms of the disease have passed, you still need to continue to adhere to the diet.

When bulbitis worsens, it is important to immediately give up foods that irritate the mucous membrane - coffee, strong tea, alcoholic drinks, spicy, smoked, salty and fatty foods. After all, they became the provoking link in the occurrence of the attack.

In the first days after an attack, you should eat only liquid food. Since food for such a patient should be easily digestible and even a kind of “unloading”. Subsequently, a mandatory condition for treatment should be separate and fractional meals. Food intake should be increased to 6 times a day. Food must be kept warm. Table salt is limited to 5 grams per day, sugar - to 50 grams.

In the first weeks, the foods allowed for consumption include soft-boiled eggs, scrambled eggs, steamed slimy porridges, baked apples, chicken broth and fillet, compotes and jelly, up to four glasses of milk, milk and cereal soups, meat and fish in the form of a soufflé. Bakery products are prohibited.

After two weeks of treatment, you can slightly expand your food intake to include day-old white bread, crackers, biscuits, low-fat sour cream, butter, low-fat cottage cheese, steamed pork cutlets, boiled veal, and pasta. The only drinks you can include for now are tea, and even a weak one. And freshly squeezed juices from non-acidic fruits and vegetables. Nutritionists can also recommend drinking one tablespoon of olive oil half an hour before meals. And so twice a day - morning and evening. This suppresses the secretion of gastric contents well and helps in treating the disease.

Sample diet menu for one day for bulbitis

Breakfast. 8 ocloc'k

  • Steamed omelette stuffed with carrots.
  • A glass of weak, slightly sweetened tea with milk.

Lunch. 10 hours

  • Apple puree.

Snack. 11 hours 30 minutes

  • Rose hip decoction

Dinner. 12 hours 30 minutes

  • Chicken meatball soup.
  • Boiled rice with steamed veal cutlet.
  • Kissel.

Afternoon snack. 15 hours

  • Glass of compote
  • Crackers

Dinner. 5:30 p.m.

  • Carrot salad
  • Fish soufflé.
  • Buckwheat porridge.

Second dinner. 19 hours

  • Rusk pudding with pear puree.
  • A glass of tea.

Before bedtime. 21 o'clock

  • A glass of milk.

It is important to remember that if you suddenly stop following this diet, you can go back to square one and then have to start treatment all over again. It is also important to listen to the recommendations of specialists.

Diet

A proper diet for bulbitis ensures the success of treatment. In the acute form, the amount of food consumed is limited. Any hot or cold food is excluded. Products that irritate the mucous membrane are strictly contraindicated. Legumes, mushrooms, rich broths, fresh bread, spinach and cabbage are excluded from the diet. Preference is given to easily digestible food.

Any canned food, strong tea and coffee are prohibited. Food should be steamed or baked in the oven without adding oil or spices. It is advisable to serve it to the patient in the form of a puree. Rough food that can mechanically injure the mucous membrane should be avoided. Food should be taken in small portions 7–8 times a day.

Alcohol, coffee, cocoa, lemonade, and chips are strictly prohibited.

For prevention purposes, it is recommended:

  • Elimination of bad habits.
  • Normalization of circadian rhythms.
  • Elimination of stressful situations.
  • Timely medical examination.

Prevention

As in the case of duodenogastric reflux (DGR), the occurrence of bulbitis can be prevented if you live by the new rules:

  1. Following the principles of healthy food consumption.
  2. Quit smoking and all alcoholic drinks, even beer.
  3. Avoiding stressful situations.
  4. Attentive attitude to health and treatment of emerging diseases.

The prognosis for recovery is most favorable provided that you seek medical help in a timely manner and comply with all prescriptions and recommendations of the attending physician.

Stomach cancer Gastric ulcer Gastritis Erosive gastritis Hiatal hernia Low stomach acidity

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