Mantriere disease causing gastritis. Replacement of parietal cells and major cells with mucous detachment cells



MENETRIER'S DISEASE
In this rare case, infectious tendons are elongated and curvature with the replacement of parietal cells and major cells with mucosal detachment cells. As a result, the mucous folds of the body and the bottom are inflated. Most patients are hypochlorite deficient. While some patients have top digestive symptoms.
In the majority of the middle and advanced ages, the majority of the population is characterized by a gastrointestinal dysfunction caused by the perfusion of infectious mucosa. The barium meal shows exaggerated, coarse, and coarse tendons that are also seen in endoscopy, although biopsies may not be deep enough to show all the histological features. Treatment with antiretroviral drugs may reduce protein loss but nonresponders need partial gastrectomy.