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)

In 1947, a patient with metastatic islet cell tumor was treated for intractable ulcer disease at the University of Chicago Medical Center. Eight years later, in retrospect, it was recognized that he and another patient had the Zollinger-Ellison syndrome (ZE). From 1947 until the present, 30 patients with the ZE syndrome have been treated at this institution. Twenty-one (70%) were male and 9 (30%) were female. Their ages ranged from 24 to 76 years. Most (79%) had abdominal pain, however, melena (42%), hematemesis (33%), and severe diarrhea (35%) were prominent as well. Symptoms were present for a mean of 5.8 years before diagnosis. Over their entire clinical course, duodenal ulcers occurred in 96% of patients, gastric ulcers in 24%, jejunal ulcers in 29%, esophageal ulcers in 6%, and stomal ulcerations in 58%. Eleven (38%) of all gastrinomas were proved to occur in the duodenum; 10 (34%) were pancreatic in origin, including 3 with the MEN I syndrome; 3 (10%) were extrapancreatic and extraduodenal in origin, and no tumor was found in 5 (17%). Each of the 3 patients with MEN I developed a proven pancreatic islet cell carcinoma with metastases as well as hyperparathyroidism and a pituitary lesion. Of 27 patients who were explored for gastrinoma, tumor was found in 20 (74%). Excluding patients with MEN who had multiple lesions throughout the pancreas, all tumors were found in the "gastrinoma triangle." Total gastrectomy was performed in 10 (37%) of 27 of all patients who were explored, in 5 (71%) of 7 when no tumor was found, and in only 5 (25%) of 20 when tumor was present. Operative mortality was 15% (4 of 27) but no death has occurred since 1974. Long-term survival has followed both tumor resection or total gastrectomy in selected individuals (including 1 patient with known multiple liver metastases who is alive 18 years after liver biopsy and total gastrectomy); however, since malignant gastrinomas were present in 46% of all patients (or 57% in whom tumor was found) and since local metastases can sometimes be removed, we favor an aggressive approach to localization and resection when liver metastases or other distant metastases are not found. Duodenal gastrinomas are particularly favorable for resection for cure. They were malignant in only 36% and their metastases were nodal in each of 4 cases. The major problem is finding them since they are often small and "occult."(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Gastrinomas: a 42-year experience. 236 40

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.
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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

Patients with the Zollinger-Ellison syndrome are characterized by islet-cell tumors, striking gastric acid hypersecretion, and peptic ulcer disease. They often experience severe abdominal pain, diarrhea, and gastrointestinal bleeding with potentially life-threatening consequences. It is a rare syndrome caused by non-beta cell islet-cell tumors (gastrinomas) located in or in proximity to the pancreas. These tumors freely secrete gastrin, a peptide hormone that serves as a powerful stimulant of gastric acid secretion. Exuberant secretion of gastrin from the gastrinomas produces severe gastric acid hypersecretion that often leads to impressive peptic ulcer disease and the constellation of symptoms listed above. We describe a patient presenting with clinical manifestations characteristic of the ZES with strikingly elevated gastric acid secretion,multiple ulcers in the first and second portions of the duodenum and diarrhea, but in absence of islet-cell tumor and/or hypergastrinemia.
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PMID:Zollinger-Ellison phenotype in the absence of hypergastrinemia and islet-cell tumor. 1587 32