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Query: UMLS:C0000737 (
abdominal pain
)
31,184
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The radiological workup of 15 patients with a carcinoid has been evaluated. As 7 of the 15 patients presented for emergency operation, only the remaining 8 had barium studies (7 barium meals and 1 barium enema). Two of the barium meals were even retrospectively, entirely negative. In two others, initially the diagnosis was missed despite radiological signs, which had been overlooked on follow-up films. Fluoroscopic examination of the small bowel would probably have ensured the detection of the lesion. At the time of diagnosis nine tenth of the tumours were already infiltrating and more than half of them metastasizing. The presence of the
carcinoid syndrome
implies the production of the causative hormones in the liver or the pulmonary circulation. In order to find the primary intestinal carcinoid in a cureable stage- that is, before it has metastasized-, all patients with diarrhoea and repeated bouts of
abdominal pain
should have a careful follow-up examination of the small bowel. This examination must include fluoroscopies.
...
PMID:[Carcinoids of the small intestine. Retrospective study of the radiological diagnosis of 15 patients (author's transl)]. 96 37
A patient with carcinoid tumor of the head of pancreas and
carcinoid syndrome
presented without liver metastasis. The patient had retroperitoneal lymphadenopathy. He had symptoms of flushing, diarrhea and
abdominal pain
. 5-Hydroxyindoleacetic acid (5-HIAA) was elevated. Absence of liver metastasis was documented not only by the negative computed tomography (CT) scan and liver/spleen scan, but also by autopsy. Except for carcinoid arising from ovary, testis, or bronchi, the other carcinoid tumors rarely cause
carcinoid syndrome
without liver metastasis. The literature was reviewed, and the findings are presented.
...
PMID:Carcinoid syndrome in the absence of liver metastasis: a case report and review of literature. 157 32
Twenty patients with histologically verified carcinoid liver metastases underwent a total of 24 liver artery embolizations by means of interventional radiologic techniques. There were no deaths. The postembolization syndrome, consisting of fever,
abdominal pain
, nausea, and vomiting, occurred in all the patients. Severe complications were rare, the most serious being multiple hepatic abscesses with septicemia in one patient, septicemia in another, and mild acute pancreatitis in a third. All these three patients recovered without any sequels from the embolization, and none required surgical intervention. The hepatic abscesses were drained percutaneously, guided by ultrasound. Hepatic artery embolization seems justified in patients with disabling symptoms from the
carcinoid syndrome
, as long as alternative therapy with the same benefit but fewer complications is not available.
...
PMID:Side effects and complications after hepatic artery embolization in the carcinoid syndrome. 187 48
Coincident with medical antitumor treatment of 138 patients suffering from mid-gut carcinoid tumors, 51 patients were subjected to surgery with the principal aims of removing primary tumors and debulking mesenteric or liver metastases. Sixteen patients had previously been operated with intestinal resection or, when the tumors had been considered inexcisable, with intestinal bypass or laparotomy alone. Apart from exhibiting symptoms related to the
carcinoid syndrome
, the majority (approximately 60%) of the 51 patients had generally intermittent, subileus-like
abdominal pain
and weight loss. In 18 patients, these symptoms were pronounced and associated with intestinal obstruction or severe malnutrition. Computed tomography and arteriography efficiently demonstrated mesenteric and liver metastases. At laparotomy, the primary intestinal tumors were small, mainly less than 1 cm in diameter, and they were multiple in 39% of the patients. Mesenteric metastases measuring up to 12 cm in diameter were present in 86% of the patients. These metastases were frequently associated with a pronounced mesenteric and retroperitoneal fibrosis causing fixation, angulation, and obstruction of the bowel as well as incipient intestinal gangrene in 8 patients. In all but 6 patients, the primary tumors could be removed by comparatively limited intestinal resections although bulky mesenteric metastases were often dissected from the mesenteric vessels. Liver metastases, found in 49% of the patients, were generally bilateral and multiple, and major hepatic metastases were resected in 6 patients. The results support a role for surgery also in the more compromised patients with mid-gut carcinoid tumors and that such intervention may be associated with considerable symptomatic relief and substantial periods of survival.
...
PMID:Surgical treatment of mid-gut carcinoid tumors. 236 41
Seven patients with progressive ileal or caecal carcinoid tumors and liver metastases were treated with human recombinant alpha-interferon (IFN alfa-2b) at a dosage of 2-4 x 10(6) U daily or every other day subcutaneously. Six patients had symptoms of the
carcinoid syndrome
. No change of tumor size lasting 4 to 40+ months (median, 18 months) was noted in 6 patients, and 1 patient had hepatic tumor progression. A decrease in urinary excretion of 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid by more than 50% lasting 2-11 months (median, 4) was observed in 5 patients. Four patients were completely or partially relieved of flushing, diarrhea, obstruction or
abdominal pain
. The side-effects were negligible with the exception of mild fever, headache and confusion only during the first days of therapy. Treatment with IFN alfa-2b offers good palliation to patients with disseminated ileal or caecal carcinoid tumor and
carcinoid syndrome
.
...
PMID:[Treatment of metastasized carcinoid tumor of the ileum and cecum with recombinant alpha-2b interferon]. 245 Mar 26
We compared the clinical and biochemical profiles of 11 patients with idiopathic flushing (IF) with those of eight patients with
carcinoid syndrome
(CS). Patients with IF were more often women, had a longer duration of symptoms, and were younger. Palpitations, syncope, and hypotension occurred only in patients with IF, while wheezing and
abdominal pain
occurred only with CS; diarrhea occurred in both types of patients. Elevated blood serotonin levels were present primarily in CS. Increased levels of urine 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid was specific for CS but unsufficiently sensitive to detect all cases. Abnormalities of gut and vasoactive peptides failed to distinguish the two conditions. Flushing in carcinoid patients responds uniformly to octreotide (Sandostatin), but only one third of the patients with IF are relieved of the symptom. Patients with IF have features that distinguish them from individuals with flushing from other causes, such as CS, postmenopausal state, chlorpropamide-alcohol flush, panic attacks, medullary thyroid carcinoma, and autonomic epilepsy. Familiarity with the clinical and biochemical features of IF should facilitate evaluation and identification of these patients.
...
PMID:Distinguishing features of idiopathic flushing and carcinoid syndrome. 246 88
Carcinoid of the small intestine, usually found in the terminal ileum, presents a diagnostic challenge when the classic clinical and laboratory findings are absent. The commonest symptom, marked
abdominal pain
due to intussusception, may arouse suspicion of carcinoid. The precise preoperative diagnosis in the absence of the classic syndrome is impossible and the only way to diagnose it is by colonoscopic biopsy of the terminal ileum. The case described illustrates such a preoperative diagnosis in a 59-year-old woman with severe
abdominal pain
, nausea, vomiting and weight loss. X-ray studies aroused suspicion of tumor intussusception as the cause of the intestinal obstruction. Colonoscopic biopsy revealed the presence of a carcinoid tumor. However, there had been no symptoms of the
carcinoid syndrome
, nor was there increased urinary 5-hydroxy indoleacetic acid. On operation the tumor was found to be disseminated and unresectable, so surgical intervention was limited to palliative ileo-transversostomy.
...
PMID:[Preoperative diagnosis of carcinoid of the terminal ileum in the absence of carcinoid syndrome]. 247 74
The chemistry, pharmacology, pharmacokinetics, clinical uses, adverse effects and drug interactions, dosage, availability and cost, and indications for use of octreotide, a new synthetic analogue of the peptide hormone somatostatin (SS), are reviewed. Like SS, octreotide suppresses secretion of pituitary growth hormone (GH) and thyrotropin and decreases release of a variety of pancreatic islet cell hormones including insulin, glucagon, and vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP). Octreotide also reduces splanchnic blood flow, gastric acid secretion, GI motility, and pancreatic exocrine function and alters the absorption of water, electrolytes, and nutrients from the GI tract. The elimination half-life of i.v. octreotide is 72-98 minutes, compared with 2-3 minutes for i.v. SS. Usual administration of octreotide is by the i.v. or s.c. route. Octreotide has been studied in the treatment of hormone-secreting pituitary tumors and pancreatic islet cell tumors. Octreotide therapy lowers GH secretion and improves clinical symptoms in patients with acromegaly and may suppress clinical symptoms to a greater degree than bromocriptine. Patients with
carcinoid syndrome
and VIP-secreting tumors (vipomas) have had substantial improvement in clinical symptoms with administration of octreotide. This agent does not appear to be effective in the treatment of nonvariceal upper GI bleeding and acute pancreatitis; its relative usefulness in the treatment of variceal bleeding is not established. Adverse effects associated with octreotide therapy generally have been mild, including pain or burning at the injection site,
abdominal pain
, and diarrhea. Octreotide has been shown to interfere with absorption of oral cyclosporine. Standard initial therapy is octreotide acetate 50-100 micrograms s.c. every 8-12 hours, with titration based on clinical and biochemical effects. Up to 3000 micrograms/day of octreotide acetate has been administered to patients with acromegaly without serious adverse effect. Octreotide is marketed under the brand name Sandostatin and is available in 1-mL ampuls containing 50, 100, and 500 micrograms of octreotide acetate. Because the conditions for which octreotide appears to be most effective are uncommon, the drug should be considered for addition to the formulary in tertiary-care institutions only; addition of octreotide to the formulary of a community hospital is probably unnecessary. The synthetic analogue octreotide is longer acting and more specific in pharmacologic action than SS.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Octreotide, a new somatostatin analogue. 265 11
Twelve duodenal carcinoid tumours are presented, 4 of them located in the ampulla. Symptoms included the Zollinger-Ellison syndrome (4 patients), the
carcinoid syndrome
(1 patient), mechanical obstruction (3 patients), bleeding (1 patient) and
abdominal pain
(1 patient). Two further tumours were detected by chance. Three patients with the Zollinger-Ellison syndrome had additional endocrine tumours characteristic of the MEN I syndrome. In 2 of them the duodenal carcinoids were of very small size and were multiple. They were observed in close proximity to focal areas of endocrine cell hyperplasia. Immunohistochemical investigations showed gastrin and somatostatin to be the predominant polypeptide hormones produced by these tumours. No somatostatinoma syndrome was encountered. In half of our cases additional production of insulin, VIP or even calcitonin in smaller amounts was found. Two of our patients had cutaneous manifestations of von Recklinghausen's disease and in both of them the carcinoid was located in the ampulla. One of these patients also had a pheochromocytoma.
...
PMID:Duodenal and ampullary carcinoid tumors. A report of 12 cases with pathological characteristics, polypeptide content and relation to the MEN I syndrome and von Recklinghausen's disease (neurofibromatosis). 286 9
Carcinoid tumors are the most frequent gut neuroendocrine tumors accounting for more than 50% of all tumors of the gastroenteropancreatic (GEP) axis. These tumors appear to derive from a stem cell line capable of differentiating into a variety of malignant cells that secrete many different peptides and amines. The symptoms of carcinoid tumors are often non-specific, vague
abdominal pain
that may precede the diagnosis by a median of 9 years.
Carcinoid syndrome
occurs in less than 10% of patients. We evaluated the effects of SMS 201-995 in 14 such patients, 12 with diarrhea, 8 with flushing, 3 with wheezing, one with tricuspid valve incompetence, 6 with facial telangiectasia, 3 with a pellagra type dermatosis and one with myopathy. Diarrhea was abolished or significantly reduced in 83%, flushing in 100%, wheezing in 100%, and myopathy improved in the one patient. Blood serotonin was resistant to change, urine 5HIAA fell in 75%, and most gut neuropeptide hormones apart from somatostatin were suppressed. Tumor growth appeared to be slowed in 2/3 of cases treated for up to 4 years. The analog of somatostatin appears to be a useful addition to the therapeutic armamentarium for carcinoid tumors and the symptom complex.
...
PMID:Use of somatostatin analog in management of carcinoid syndrome. 292 Jun 54
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