Initializing Vogelview...
Performing medical cross-referencing...
Initializing Vogelview...
Performing medical cross-referencing...
Loading...
Your H. pylori stool antigen is negative. This is the normal and reassuring result.
No H. pylori antigen was detected in your stool. H. pylori is a bacteria that colonizes the stomach lining and causes peptic ulcers, chronic gastritis, and significantly increases risk of stomach cancer. A negative result indicates no active infection.
No action needed. If you have persisting stomach symptoms, other causes should be explored with your doctor.
H. pylori stool antigen: negative — no active H. pylori infection detectedYour H. pylori stool antigen test is negative. This is a reassuring result indicating no active H. pylori infection.
No action needed.
H. pylori stool antigen: negative — no active infectionYour H. pylori stool antigen is in the negative range with no active infection detected.
No action needed.
H. pylori stool antigen: negative/low — no active infection detectedYour H. pylori stool antigen is negative. This is the normal and reassuring result.
No specific action required.
H. pylori stool antigen: negative — normal, infection-free resultYour H. pylori test is negative. This is the optimal result, indicating no infection from this common stomach pathogen.
No action needed.
H. pylori stool antigen: negative — optimal, no infectionYour H. pylori stool antigen test returned an equivocal (borderline) result. This can occur during treatment, shortly after treatment, or due to low antigen concentrations. An equivocal result cannot confirm or rule out active infection.
Repeat the stool antigen test after stopping proton pump inhibitors for 2 weeks and antibiotics for 4 weeks. Discuss with your doctor.
H. pylori stool antigen: equivocal — borderline result; repeat testing recommendedYour stool antigen test is positive, confirming active H. pylori infection. H. pylori infects the stomach lining and is the leading cause of peptic ulcer disease, chronic gastritis, and is associated with a significantly increased risk of gastric cancer with long-term infection.
See your doctor to arrange H. pylori eradication therapy (typically a 10–14 day course of antibiotics plus a proton pump inhibitor). Confirm eradication with a test-of-cure stool antigen or breath test 4 weeks after completing treatment.
H. pylori stool antigen: positive — active H. pylori infection confirmedYour H. pylori stool antigen is strongly positive, confirming active infection with significant bacterial burden. Untreated H. pylori infection causes progressive gastric damage, peptic ulcers, and substantially increases lifetime risk of gastric cancer.
See your doctor promptly to arrange H. pylori eradication therapy. Upper endoscopy may also be recommended if you have noticeable symptoms, anemia, or a family history of gastric cancer.
H. pylori stool antigen: strongly positive — heavy H. pylori infection burdenUpload your lab report and get your actual values interpreted in plain English — instantly, with no medical training required.