Pathology

Pathology

Gastric ulcers have similar features to duodenal ulcers but tend to be larger. Fibrosis may result in an ‘hourglass’ deformity of the stomach. Chronic ulcers may erode posteriorly into the pancreas, major vessels such as the splenic artery or rarely into other organs such as the transverse colon. Chronic gastric the incisura angularis; Figures 67.12 and 67.13 ) than on the greater curve and, even when high on the lesser curve, they tend to be at the boundary between the acid-secr eting and the non-acid-secr eting epithelia. With atrophy of parietal cell mass, non-acid-secreting epithelium migrates up the lesser curvature. Pathology


Revision #1
Created 2025-12-31 15:25:10 UTC by Omar Ayman
Updated 2025-12-31 15:25:10 UTC by Omar Ayman