Let's talk about Helicobacter. It has begun to step on the heels of standard medicine. Those who have been following current research for a long time know that it has already begun to be eradicated. Yet because the truth does not turn a profit, only a limited number of people who read professional special medical journals even know about the rehabilitation of Helicobacter the Terrible.

Physiologist Barry Marshall isolated this microbe from samples of the human gastric mucosa and suggested that most stomach ulcers and gastritis are caused by infection with Helicobacter pylori and not by stress or diet, as previously assumed.

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The article discusses H. pylori through a history-of-medicine lens.

But it had to be proved that this microbe can cause ulcers. So Marshall drank a culture of H. pylori, and his stomach hurt badly. This shocked everyone, even the most ardent skeptics. Even more impressive was the rapid healing of the problem after taking an antimicrobial drug.

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The stomach ulcer was first described in the 2nd century by the doctor Galen. In the 10th century, Avicenna wrote in The Canon of Medicine that an ulcer could cause bleeding and lead to the death of the patient. For a long time, doctors believed ulcers arose due to nervousness, stress, and irritability, and treated them with rest, soft food, and herbs.

Modern medicine owes the recognition of ulcers as a disease to Friedrich Uden, who published his work on ulcers in 1816. Since then, ulcers have been studied more earnestly to understand why they form.

For more than two hundred years, the main theory was the idea that the life and vital activity of microbes are impossible within the acidic environment of the stomach contents. Later, a bacterium was identified in the pylorus and called Helicobacter pylori.

In the 1980s, when there was not even the whiff of any Helicobacter, there was simply a microbe known as Campylobacter pyloric, which was almost indistinguishable from H. pylori. If a patient was bothered by something in the stomach area, he was given a drug that reduced the secretion of stomach juice, and the person's pain went away.

It is well known that the medical community usually takes new ideas with hostility. At first, Marshall and Warren, who developed this idea, were laughed at, but they continued to defend their theory.

Unfortunately, almost every other person in the world has some form of indigestion. According to medical statistics cited in the source material, many people have Helicobacter without symptoms. The article advises readers not to rush to medications right away and to consult qualified medical professionals.