Wormsley K G
Baillieres Clin Gastroenterol. 1988 Jul;2(3):555-71. doi: 10.1016/s0950-3528(88)80005-8.
It seems that duodenal and gastric ulcers are caused by environmental ulcerogens, which are probably infectious or chemical. The reasons for individual susceptibility to these ulcerogens have not been defined and, indeed, it is not yet certain that the effects are not essentially random. Abnormalities of function of the mucosae of the upper alimentary tract do not appear to be necessary or sufficient for the production of ulcers. The two principal clinical aspects of ulcer disease--the tendency to form chronic mucosal wounds and the tendency of the wounds to recur during many years--point to, but cannot yet be explained in terms of, failure of the processes involved in wound repair. More specifically, it is not known whether there is interference with the processes involved in normal mucosal repair or whether there is failure of the repair processes. When these problems are closer to solution, it will perhaps be possible to assess how environmental factors influence ulcerogenesis.