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What Causes Stomach Inflammation Seen In Endoscopy? | A To Z

Stomach lining inflammation found during an endoscopy can stem from H. pylori, NSAIDs, bile reflux, alcohol, infection, or autoimmune disease.

An endoscopy photo that reads “inflamed” can feel frustratingly vague. You can see redness or irritation, yet you still don’t know why it happened. If you’re trying to figure out what causes stomach inflammation seen in endoscopy, the answer usually sits at the intersection of three things: what the lining looked like, what the biopsies showed, and what’s been happening in your day‑to‑day life (medicines, alcohol, recent illness, surgery, and symptoms).

Below, you’ll learn what endoscopists mean by “inflammation,” the most common drivers, which biopsy phrases narrow the cause, and how to prepare for a follow‑up visit so you leave with a clear next step.

Why “Inflammation” Shows Up On An Endoscopy Report

Upper endoscopy lets a clinician inspect the stomach lining directly. When the surface looks irritated, the report may use broad words like “inflammation” or “gastritis,” or visual terms like “erythema” (redness), “edema” (swelling), “friability” (easy bleeding), “erosions,” or “ulcer.”

Those words describe appearance, not the full cause. Redness can show up after vomiting, during an H. pylori infection, or after recent aspirin use. Small erosions can show up with NSAIDs, bile reflux, or heavy alcohol intake. Some people also have symptoms with minimal visual change, while others have a dramatic‑looking lining and few symptoms.

Biopsies bridge that gap. A biopsy is a tiny tissue sample taken during the scope. Under the microscope, a pathologist can confirm whether true inflammatory cells are present, spot patterns that match medication injury or bile exposure, and check for organisms such as H. pylori.

Gastritis Vs Gastropathy

These two terms get mixed up. Gastritis means inflammation on microscopy. Gastropathy means surface injury and irritation without the same inflammatory pattern. They can coexist, and the biopsy wording is what separates them.

What Endoscopy Can Tell You And What It Can’t

Endoscopy is strong at finding surface problems: erosions, ulcers, bleeding, thickened folds, nodules, and areas that look pale or thinned. It also shows where the change sits—lower stomach (antrum), upper stomach (body/fundus), or across the stomach.

Endoscopy alone often can’t name the driver on the spot. A red patch can be infection, medication injury, bile irritation, or a healing area after a prior ulcer. A normal‑looking stomach can also hide inflammation that only shows up on biopsy.

If you’d like a refresher on what upper endoscopy can detect and why biopsies are taken, the ASGE upper endoscopy (EGD) page explains the basics in patient‑friendly language.

Stomach Inflammation Seen On Endoscopy With Practical Cause Clues

Most cases fall into a short list. Your clinician usually narrows it by lining appearance, biopsy pattern, symptom timing, and exposures (medicines, alcohol, smoking, surgery history, immune status).

H. pylori Infection

H. pylori can cause chronic gastritis, ulcers, and a higher stomach cancer risk over time. Endoscopy may show redness, nodularity, erosions, or ulcers, but confirmation comes from biopsy testing or breath/stool testing. The MedlinePlus H. pylori overview explains how the bacteria damages the stomach lining and why eradication matters.

NSAIDs And Aspirin

NSAIDs (like ibuprofen and naproxen) and aspirin can weaken the stomach’s protective layer. That can lead to reactive gastropathy, erosions, or ulcers. Risk rises with higher doses, long‑term use, older age, blood thinners, steroids, and a past ulcer. Many people forget to count “as needed” doses, so write down the timing and dose before your follow‑up.

Bile Reflux And Chemical Irritation

Bile belongs in the small intestine, yet it can wash back into the stomach, often after gallbladder or stomach surgery. This can irritate the lining and create a reactive (chemical) pattern on biopsy. Some pills can also irritate the stomach directly—iron tablets and potassium pills are common culprits when taken without enough water.

Alcohol, Tobacco, And Severe Physical Stress

Alcohol can irritate the lining and raise bleeding risk, especially when paired with NSAIDs. Tobacco is tied to slower ulcer healing and higher recurrence. In hospital settings, severe illness can also trigger stress‑related erosions and bleeding, which is one reason doctors use acid suppression in high‑risk inpatient care.

Autoimmune Gastritis

Autoimmune gastritis targets acid‑making cells in the stomach body. Over time, it can lead to vitamin B12 deficiency and iron deficiency. Biopsy often shows body‑predominant atrophy and can be paired with intestinal metaplasia. If this pattern shows up, labs for B12, iron, and antibodies are common next steps.

Other Infections And Immune Conditions

People with weakened immune systems can develop viral stomach ulcers (such as CMV). Eosinophilic gastritis can cause swelling and pain and is tied to allergic disease in some cases. Crohn’s disease can also involve the stomach, though it more often affects the small bowel and colon.

For a reputable, plain‑language list of causes, read NIDDK’s symptoms and causes of gastritis and gastropathy. In the UK, the NHS gastritis page gives a clear snapshot of symptoms, triggers, and usual treatments.

Table: Common Causes, Typical Clues, And Next Moves

Cause Clues On Scope Or Biopsy Common Next Move
H. pylori gastritis Chronic active gastritis; lymphoid aggregates; antral‑predominant changes Confirm test; treat; retest to prove eradication
NSAID/aspirin injury Erosions or ulcers; reactive gastropathy; surface damage Medication review; reduce exposure; acid suppression if advised
Bile reflux (chemical gastropathy) Reactive changes; bile in stomach; foveolar hyperplasia Review surgery history; meal timing changes; meds if symptoms persist
Alcohol irritation Erosive changes; bleeding spots; timing with heavy intake Pause alcohol; treat erosions if present
Autoimmune gastritis Body‑predominant atrophy; intestinal metaplasia; loss of acid cells Check B12/iron; plan follow‑up; replace deficiencies
Eosinophilic gastritis Eosinophils on biopsy; swelling; thickened folds Allergy history review; targeted therapy plan
Portal hypertensive gastropathy Snake-skin pattern in people with portal hypertension Assess liver status; manage portal pressure; plan for bleeding risk
Viral ulcers (CMV/HSV) Large ulcers; viral changes on biopsy; immunosuppression history Antiviral plan with specialist care
Crohn’s involvement Focal inflammation; granulomas in some cases; ulcers beyond stomach Full GI workup; treat systemic disease

Biopsy Terms That Change The Story

Pathology results often carry the real answer. If you have the report in hand, a few common phrases can steer the next step.

Chronic Active Gastritis

This usually points to ongoing inflammation with active immune cells. H. pylori is a common cause, so the report may mention organisms seen on stain. If the stain is negative but suspicion stays high, breath or stool testing may still be used, since sampling can miss patchy infection.

Reactive Or Chemical Gastropathy

This pattern fits NSAID exposure or bile reflux in many cases. The lining may show surface injury and foveolar hyperplasia. The next step is often a medication audit plus symptom tracking after removing irritants where possible.

Atrophy And Intestinal Metaplasia

Atrophy means gland loss. Intestinal metaplasia means stomach lining that resembles intestinal lining. These findings can come from long‑standing H. pylori or autoimmune gastritis. Your clinician may plan follow‑up based on extent and location, plus your family history and other risk factors.

Dysplasia

Dysplasia is a pre‑cancer change. It usually calls for a timely plan, which may include repeat endoscopy with careful mapping biopsies and removal of any visible lesion.

Steps That Can Ease Symptoms While Results Are Pending

Waiting on pathology is common. These practical steps can reduce symptoms and also make follow‑up decisions clearer.

Write A Full Exposure List

List every medicine and supplement you take, even “as needed” pills. Include dose, timing, and start date. Add alcohol intake and tobacco use. Bring the list to your visit so your clinician can match exposures to the biopsy pattern.

Use Acid Reducers With A Plan

PPIs and H2 blockers can help pain and healing. They can also affect some H. pylori tests. If testing is planned soon, ask when to pause acid reducers and bismuth products so results stay reliable.

Eat And Drink In A Stomach-Friendly Pattern

  • Try smaller meals for a week and track symptoms.
  • Avoid alcohol until the cause is clear.
  • If spicy, acidic, or fried foods trigger pain, cut them short‑term and recheck.
  • Stay upright after eating. Wait 2 to 3 hours before lying down.

Know When Self-Care Is Not Enough

If you can’t keep fluids down, if pain is escalating, or if new dizziness shows up, call your clinician the same day. Those patterns can signal dehydration, bleeding, or an ulcer complication.

Table: Red Flags That Need Fast Care

Red Flag Why It Matters Action
Vomiting blood Can mean active upper GI bleeding Emergency care now
Black, tarry stools Can signal digested blood from stomach or duodenum Same‑day urgent evaluation
Fainting or severe weakness Could link to blood loss or dehydration Emergency care now
Persistent vomiting Raises dehydration risk and can hide obstruction Call clinician today
New trouble swallowing May signal a narrowing or other upper GI issue Prompt medical review
Rapid drop in hemoglobin or iron Points to bleeding or poor absorption Prompt lab review and plan
Biopsy shows high‑grade dysplasia Pre‑cancer change that needs fast action Expedited GI follow‑up

Questions To Bring To Your Follow-Up Visit

Bring your endoscopy report, pathology report, and medication list. Then ask a small set of direct questions.

  • What did the biopsies show: gastritis, gastropathy, or both?
  • Was H. pylori tested, and which test was used?
  • If an ulcer was found, do I need repeat endoscopy to confirm healing?
  • Which medicines or supplements should I change right now?
  • Do I need labs for anemia, iron, or vitamin B12?
  • Which symptoms should trigger a same‑day call?

What Usually Happens After A Cause Is Identified

Once the driver is clear, treatment tends to be straightforward. H. pylori calls for combination therapy plus retesting. Medication‑related injury calls for reducing the irritant and letting the lining heal with acid suppression when advised. Autoimmune gastritis often shifts the plan toward nutrient replacement and follow‑up based on biopsy patterns.

If symptoms don’t match the biopsy result, ask what other testing fits your situation. The goal is a clear diagnosis, a clear treatment plan, and a clear checkpoint to judge whether it worked.

References & Sources

Mo Maruf
Founder & Lead Editor

Mo Maruf

I created WellFizz to bridge the gap between vague wellness advice and actionable solutions. My mission is simple: to decode the research and give you practical tools you can actually use.

Beyond the data, I am a passionate traveler. I believe that stepping away from the screen to explore new environments is essential for mental clarity and physical vitality.