Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0000737 (abdominal pain)
31,184 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A dynamic study of scintigraphy of the pancreas using 75Se-selenomethionine in diabetic patients was performed. Patients were selected who complained of abdominal pain or diarrhea or both and whose pancreatic exocrine functions were thought to be disturbed. Selenium-75-selenomethionine (3 muCi/kg body weight) was injected intravenously and radioactivity (cpm) was recorded by a scinticamera for 10 min successively up to 120 min. After 20-30 min the increase of radioactivity in the selected area of the displayed pancreas usually reached a plateau. Pancreozymin (1 Harper unit/kg) and secretin (1 harper unit/kg) were administered intravenously and decrease of radioactivity in the same area was followed for 60 min to examine pancreatic exocrine function. After 75Se-selenomethionine injection, the angle of the initial increase of radioactivity, the height of the plateau, and the reactive decrease of radioactivity after pancreozymin and secretin were analyzed in each case. Radioactivity recorded on data tape was reproduced for each 10-min period on a cathode-ray tube display. Areas of interest were selected for dynamic analyses. To supplement the diagnosis by visual image of a scintigram of the pancreas, the scintigram was quantified in the present study and the dynamic curves of radioactivity in the selected area of the displayed pancreas were studied for a total of 3 hr. Application of the dynamic study of the pancreas scintigraphy and the additional data analyses seemed useful for the early detection of pancreatic exocrine dysfunction in diabetic patients in whom the ordinary laboratory pancreatic exocrine function tests gave uncertain results.
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PMID:Dynamic study of exocrine function of the pancreas in diabetes mellitus with scintigraphy using 75Se-selenomethionine. 111 83

Our published dietary and pharmakokinetic studies in 15 patients with idiopathic chronic pancreatitis and 15 age- and sex-matched controls suggested that a combination of subnormal antioxidant intakes and chronic induction of the cytochromes P450 facilitates the pancreatic problem. We have now attempted to determine the relative importance of these two factors by studying a group of 15 institutionalized patients with epilepsy (EP), but without abdominal pain, who were on long-term treatment with anticonvulsant inducers of cytochromes P450 so that their clearance of theophylline (which reflects cytochromes P450 activities, and thereby provides an index of antioxidant demand) was as high as in the patients with chronic pancreatitis (CP) (mean +/- s.d., 123 +/- 59 ml/kg/h versus 120 +/- 62 respectively), and significantly higher than in controls (74 +/- 16 ml/kg/h, P less than 0.02). Canonical variate analysis of the drug kinetic and dietary data provided two functions with which to separate the three groups. The first function, heavily weighted on selenium, separated the controls from the other two groups whose values were lower; the second function, equally weighted on methionine and vitamin C, separated the EP group from the CP group whose values were generally lower. The results suggest that enzyme induction per se is not the critical factor in the development of CP. Instead, suboptimal availability of antioxidants in the face of increased demand--in particular of those substances that protect cells against non-biological free radicals--may be the key consideration, a deduction reinforced by observations in patients with epilepsy who went on to develop chronic pancreatitis.
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PMID:Antioxidants, enzyme induction, and chronic pancreatitis: a reappraisal following studies in patients on anticonvulsants. 322 2

Gastrointestinal complaints and occult bleeding have been commonly described in marathon runners. We hypothesized that these complaints may arise from intestinal ischemia caused by the shunting of blood away from the splanchnic circulation during endurance racing followed by reperfusion injury. Studies in animal models have suggested prophylactic vitamin E supplementation may prevent this type of injury. We sought to determine if prerace vitamin E supplementation would prevent intestinal ischemia/reperfusion injury in humans. Forty subjects who planned to complete the 1996 Houston-Tennaco Marathon were randomized to receive vitamin E (1000 IU daily) or placebo (soya lecithin) for 2 wk before the race in a double-blinded trial. Inclusion criteria included no use of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) within 24 d of the race or vitamin or mineral supplements containing vitamins C or E or selenium within 30 d of the race. Subjects were studied 2 wk before the race and immediately following the race. Blood was obtained for serum vitamin E and total lipid and salicylate concentrations. A solution of lactulose (5 g) and mannitol (2 g) was consumed and urine was collected for 6 h. Aliquots were assayed for lactulose and mannitol concentration. Stool samples were tested for occult blood and following the race subjects rated their nausea, abdominal pain, and cramping on a 1-5 scale. Twenty-six subjects (24 male, 2 female) completed the marathon. Finish times ranged between 2 h 43 min and 5 h 28 min. All subjects had heme-negative stool prerace and four developed heme-positive stool postrace, with no difference between vitamin E and placebo groups (Fisher's exact = 0.63). All had non-detectable salicylate concentrations pre- and postrace. Serum vitamin E concentration increased in botPP = 0.02 in the vitamin E group and 1.45 +/- 0.40 to 1.66 +/- 0.48 mg/dL in the placebo group, P = 0.02). However, the serum vitamin E: total lipid ratio increased significantly in the vitamin E-supplemented group (0.0022 +/- 0.0002 to 0.0051 +/- 0.0015, P = 0.02), but not in the placebo group (P = 0.25). Overall, the urinary lactulose:mannitol ratio increased from 0.03 +/- 0.02 to 0.06 +/- 0.08 postrace (P = 0.06) without difference between vitamin E or placebo groups. Intestinal permeability increased significantly more in those who developed occult bleeding. More subjects in the placebo group developed abdominal cramping (Fisher's exact = 0.04) and abdominal pain (Fisher's exact = 0.06), although there was no difference in severity between groups. There was no difference in the incidence of nausea and no diarrhea was reported by any subject. Intestinal permeability tends to increase and occult gastrointestinal bleeding occurs during endurance running, suggesting the occurrence of intestinal ischemia/reperfusion injury. Prerace supplementation with the antioxidant vitamin E had no effect on performance, intestinal injury, occult bleeding, or the severity of postrace gastrointestinal complaints. Vitamin E supplementation was associated with a decreased incidence of these complaints but had no effect on their severity.
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PMID:Short-term vitamin E supplementation before marathon running: a placebo-controlled trial. 1031 59

Oxygen-derived free radicals mediate tissue damage in acute and chronic pancreatitis. Low levels of natural antioxidants in pancreatitis indicate their increased utilization as scavengers of free radicals. Combination therapy with selenium, beta-carotene, methionine, and vitamins C and E are known to improve symptoms of chronic and recurrent pancreatitis. This, however, requires many tablets to be taken daily, which is impractical and may reduce compliance. Three patients with chronic pancreatitis (two with a history of alcohol excess and one idiopathic) are reported. Treatment with narcotic analgesics and pancreatic enzyme supplements had failed to control their symptoms. The addition of a commercially available IH636 grape seed proanthocyanidin extract (commercially known as ActiVin) to their treatment regimen led to a reduction in the frequency and intensity of abdominal pain as well as resolution of vomiting in 1 patient.
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PMID:Beneficial effects of a novel IH636 grape seed proanthocyanidin extract in the treatment of chronic pancreatitis. 1135 Nov 48

Patients with chronic pancreatitis (CP) typically suffer intractable abdominal pain that is resistant to most analgesic strategies. Recent research indicates that the pain of CP may be in part due to oxygen free radical induced pancreatic damage. Using a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled crossover trial, we evaluated the efficacy of a combined antioxidant preparation in the management of CP. Patients with confirmed chronic pancreatitis (N = 36) were randomized to receive treatment with either Antox, which contains the antioxidants selenium, betacarotene, L-methionine, and vitamins C and E, or placebo for 10 weeks. Each group of patients then switched to receive the alternative treatment for a further 10 weeks. Markers of antioxidant status were measured by blood sampling, whereas quality of life and pain were assessed using the SF-36 questionnaire. Nineteen patients completed the full 20 weeks of treatment. Treatment with Antox was associated with significant improvements in quality of life in terms of pain (+17 antioxidant vs. -7 placebo), physical (+9 vs. -3) and social functioning (+8 vs. -7), and general health perception (+10 vs. -3). We conclude that treatment with antioxidants may improve quality of life and reduce pain in patients suffering from chronic pancreatitis.
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PMID:Combined antioxidant therapy reduces pain and improves quality of life in chronic pancreatitis. 1662 14

Two patients, a 36-year-old female and a 36-year-old male, separately experienced new onset nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, abdominal pain, muscle weakness and pallor. Over a period of 14-16 h these symptoms continue and progress to include hypotension refractory to therapy, pulmonary edema and cardiovascular collapse. Autopsies show hemorrhagic pulmonary edema, splenomegaly and lack of anatomical cause for sudden death. Postmortem analysis, in one case post-embalming and exhumation, revealed elevated selenium concentrations and a determination of the cause of death. These two cases present several important features associated with selenium toxicity, two of which are previously unreported: (1) selenium as a potential homicidal agent, (2) the toxidrome and time frame of selenium toxicity, (3) selenium determination in exhumed, embalmed tissues, (4) postmortem urinary selenium concentration, and (5) decrease in tissue concentrations over time.
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PMID:Two fatal cases of selenium toxicity. 1689 Oct 71

Epidemiologic studies have shown the health risks of exposure to cigarette smoke and air pollution, with heavy metal composition implicated as contributing to both. Environmental exposure to cigarette smoke has been epidemiologically associated with pancreatic cancer, but the pathophysiologic basis for this is not yet clear. In the current work, we have used inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry to quantify the metal composition of pancreatic juice collected in response to secretin stimulation in successive patients evaluated for abdominal pain (35 with pancreatic cancer, 30 with chronic pancreatitis, and 35 with normal pancreas). Indeed, metal composition of pancreatic juice was distinctive in patients with pancreatic cancer relative to those without such a cancer. The metal concentrations that were found to have the strongest association with pancreatic cancer were chromium, selenium, and molybdenum, with 1 SD increases in the concentrations of each associated with substantial increases in the odds of having pancreatic cancer relative to those in patients with normal pancreas (210%, 160%, and 76%, respectively). Of note, elevations in concentrations of chromium and selenium did not correlate in individuals, whereas those having a 1 SD increase in the sum of the concentrations of these two metals in their pancreatic juice had a 480% increase in the odds of having pancreatic cancer. Elevations of nickel and zinc correlated with elevated chromium in individuals, with each of these metals known to be present in cigarette smoke, whereas other recognized metal components of cigarette smoke were not elevated. An understanding of why these metals are elevated in pancreatic juice and what effects they might have on pancreatic cells may have important implications for the diagnosis, treatment, and even prevention of pancreatic cancer.
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PMID:Distinctive heavy metal composition of pancreatic juice in patients with pancreatic carcinoma. 1808 71

Selenium (Se) is an essential trace element in human and animal nutrition. It is also widely utilized in industrial processes. Reports of acute selenium toxicity in humans are rare. We report a case of a 23-year-old female who consumed about 100 mL of liquid selenite broth and presented with severe nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, hematemesis and acute renal failure (ARF). The serum selenium level was significantly increased. Gastro-duodenoscopy revealed severe corrosive gastritis. Renal biopsy showed features of acute tubular necrosis (ATN), affecting primarily the proximal tubules. The patient was managed with gastric lavage, blood transfusions, infusion of fresh frozen plasma (FFP) and platelet concentrates and hemo-dialysis. The patient was discharged five weeks after admission and her renal functions recovered completely by eight weeks after admission. She continues to be on regular follow-up for any possible sequelae of mucosal corrosive damage. This case highlights a case of selenium intoxication from selenite broth resulting in ARF and corrosive gastritis. The recovery was complete.
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PMID:Selenium intoxication with selenite broth resulting in acute renal failure and severe gastritis. 1911 27

Chronic pancreatitis is a serious condition associated with severe abdominal pain, and a significant percentage of patients progresses to irreversible calcification in pancreas. The present study evaluates the degree to which the levels of trace elements, copper, iron, selenium, zinc and haemoglobin-Fe(3+), in blood, serum and pancreas have any role to play in the calcification process associated with fibrosis in pancreas. Twenty-seven calcific (CCP) and 23 non-calcific chronic pancreatitis (CP) patients and equal number of age- and sex-matched normal volunteers (50) were enrolled in the study. Surgically removed pancreatic tissue and blood samples were analysed for copper, iron, selenium, zinc, protein, collagen and lipid peroxidation products in terms of malondialdehyde, protein carbonyls, glutathione, methemoglobin, methemoglobin reductase and ceruloplasmin activity levels. We could find that the pancreatic tissue levels of copper, iron, protein and collagen contents were significantly elevated in CCP patients when compared to CP patients. Serum levels of copper, free ionic copper and iron were also elevated in CCP patients. The serum and the pancreatic tissue level of zinc and selenium showed a significant decrease in CCP patients. The level of methemoglobin was elevated more significantly with the concomitant decline in the activity of methemoglobin reductase. There was a positive correlation between the pancreatic level of copper and iron with the collagen and protein levels. The results of the present study revealed that the levels of copper and iron, the pro-oxidants and zinc and selenium may influence calcification process in CCP patients. Hypoxia-related tissue injury due to the formation of oxidised haemoglobin may also contribute to the pathogenesis of calcification in pancreas.
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PMID:Influence of copper, iron, zinc and fe (3) (+) haemoglobin levels on the etiopathogenesis of chronic calcific pancreatitis--a study in patients with pancreatitis. 2080 71

Poor oral availability and susceptibility to reduction and protease degradation is a major hurdle in peptide drug development. However, drugable receptors in the gut present an attractive niche for peptide therapeutics. Here we demonstrate, in a mouse model of chronic abdominal pain, that oxytocin receptors are significantly upregulated in nociceptors innervating the colon. Correspondingly, we develop chemical strategies to engineer non-reducible and therefore more stable oxytocin analogues. Chemoselective selenide macrocyclization yields stabilized analogues equipotent to native oxytocin. Ultra-high-field nuclear magnetic resonance structural analysis of native oxytocin and the seleno-oxytocin derivatives reveals that oxytocin has a pre-organized structure in solution, in marked contrast to earlier X-ray crystallography studies. Finally, we show that these seleno-oxytocin analogues potently inhibit colonic nociceptors both in vitro and in vivo in mice with chronic visceral hypersensitivity. Our findings have potentially important implications for clinical use of oxytocin analogues and disulphide-rich peptides in general.
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PMID:Selenoether oxytocin analogues have analgesic properties in a mouse model of chronic abdominal pain. 2453 27


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