Helicobacter
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
This article has been peer reviewed but is awaiting expert review. If you would like to help with this, please see more information about expert reviewing. |
|
Overview
- Related to Campylobacter species and Arcobacter species
- A bacterial pathogen of the intestines
- Discovered in the stomach of humans in 1987
- H. felis, H. bizzozeronii, H. salomonis and H. bilis found in gastric mucosa and intestines of dogs and cats
Characteristics
- Helical, S-shaped or curved Gram negative rods
- Require enriched media; some grow on Skirrow agar
- Microaerophilic, non-saccharolytic
- Oxidase positive and catalase positive except for H. canis
- Helicobacters which colonise gastric mucosa are urease positive
Clinical infections
- Helicobacter pylori causes gastritis and duodenal and gastric ulcers in humans
- Association with gastric adenocarcinoma in humans
- H. mustelae has been associated with chronic gastritis and gastric ulcers in ferrets
- Significance in gastrointestinal diseases of domestic carnivores not known