A couple of questions

What are the symptoms of Helicobacter?

Can Helicobacter make you feel ill?

pylori have no problems. However, some people develop problems, such as stomach ulcers. Ulcers may cause no symptoms, or may cause pain or discomfort (usually in the upper abdomen), bloating, feeling full after eating a small amount of food, lack of appetite, nausea, vomiting, and dark or tar-colored stools.

What will happen if H. pylori goes untreated?

If it's not treated, it can sometimes cause ulcers, which are painful, open sores in your stomach lining that bleed. Studies show that people who are infected with H. pylori are also up to 8 times more likely to get a certain kind of stomach, or gastric, cancer.

Can Helicobacter cause back pain?

The pain is sometimes worse at night or when the stomach is empty. There may be temporary relief from taking an antacid. However, the pain does come back. Symptoms of gastritis often include upper belly pain, nausea, and vomiting.

Can Helicobacter cause dizziness?

My symptoms of Helicobacter pylori were pain in upper right quadrant of the abdomen, vertigo, nausea, no appetite, lethargy, bloating, heart palpitations and heartburn. Pain is worse after eating.

Will H. pylori go away on its own?

These side effects are usually minor and go away on their own. You can cure H. pylori infection only if you take the medicines just the way your doctor tells you. If you forget to take some of your medicines or stop taking them because of side effects, the infection will not be cured.

Does H. pylori make you tired?

Two-thirds of the world's population—over 4.5 billion people—have bad bacteria known as H. Pylori living in their stomach. This harmful bacteria can be a major source of fatigue. Your stomach's inner lining produces acid to digest food, while simultaneously creating protective mucus to guard from this acid.

Does H. pylori affect bowel movements?

Helicobacter pylori is one of the world's most common infections, with person-to-person transmission the predominant mode of acquisition. In a previous study, we showed that H. pylori is recoverable from vomitus and stools during induced emesis and catharsis but is undetectable in normal stools [1].