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Publication : Animal models of stomach carcinogenesis.

First Author  Tsukamoto T Year  2007
Journal  Toxicol Pathol Volume  35
Issue  5 Pages  636-48
PubMed ID  17654405 Mgi Jnum  J:138107
Mgi Id  MGI:3804174 Doi  10.1080/01926230701420632
Citation  Tsukamoto T, et al. (2007) Animal models of stomach carcinogenesis. Toxicol Pathol 35(5):636-48
abstractText  Although incidences of stomach cancer have decreased over the past several decades, the disease remains an important public health problem. To identify pathological and molecular biochemical mechanisms, various experimental animal models have been established in rats and mice with chemical carcinogens including N-methyl-N'-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine (MNNG) and N-methyl-N-nitrosourea (MNU). Helicobacter pylori(H. pylori) is one of the most important factors for human stomach disorders, including neoplasia, and the H. pylori-infected and carcinogen-treated Mongolian gerbil (MG) has proven very useful for analyses of underlying processes. The findings with this model support the hypothesis that intestinal metaplasia is important not as a precancerous lesion but rather as a paracancerous condition and that intestinalization of stomach cancer progresses with chronic inflammation. Furthermore, dose-dependent enhancing effects of salt on stomach carcinogenesis could be demonstrated in MGs treated with MNU and H. pylori modifying surface mucous gel layer. H. pylori itself only causes chronic inflammation and acts as a promoter of stomach carcinogenesis in experimental models. Based on the precise pathological diagnosis of stomach lesions such as noncancerous heterotopic proliferative glands (HPG) and adenocarcinomas, a basis for understanding mechanisms of carcinogenesis has been established on which chemoprevention can be modeled.
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