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Query: UMLS:C0000737 (
abdominal pain
)
31,184
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Pain is the major symptom in chronic pancreatitis. Its intensity frequently necessitates partial or complete pancreatectomy. The mechanisms of pain are not yet fully understood and, thereby, the therapeutic management is still controversial. Possible causes of pain include outflow obstruction with increased ductal and parenchymal pressure within the pancreas, and inflammatory involvement of intrapancreatic nerve fibres. Possible extrapancreatic causes are common bile duct and duodenal stenosis. The first theory has recently been substantiated by the demonstration of a definite relationship between intrapancreatic pressure, as measured intraoperatively, and intensity of pain. Infiltration of inflammatory cells around the nerves together with an increase in the number of nerve fibres in the fibrotic pancreatic tissue has been proposed as a possible cause of pain in chronic pancreatitis. Moreover, immunohistological studies have shown that the amount of neurotransmitters, such as
substance P
, is increased in afferent pancreatic nerves. Stenosis of the common bile duct and duodenum has been reported to be associated with severe
abdominal pain
. Common bile duct and duodenal stenosis in chronic pancreatitis may be caused by extension of fibrosis and active inflammation of the pancreas within the wall of duodenum and bile duct. This article updates the different pathogenetic mechanisms in pancreatic pain and the current therapeutic possibilities with their advantages and shortcomings.
...
PMID:[Pain in chronic pancreatitis: recent pathogenetic findings]. 129 36
Future treatments of functional intestinal disorders (FID) are essentially dependent on the possible pathophysiologic hypotheses. Schematically, symptoms experienced by patients with FID can be attributed to intestinal (small or large intestine) motor disturbances or to visceral sensitivity derangement, which, in turn, may be primary or secondary to an anomalous response to alimentation, liberation of hormones or neuromediators, or to a "stress" situation. New therapeutic agents can be directed against the symptoms experienced by patients (? action on pain or intestinal transit disorders) or against the initial pathophysiologic mechanisms. In the treatment of functional diarrhea, several substances have been proposed recently. Encephalines are peptides with extremely short duration of action which are degraded by two membranous enzymes, encephalinase and carboxypeptidase. Recently, it has been shown that acetorphan, an inhibitor of encephalinase, is efficacious in acute diarrhea. Alpha-2-antagonists are substances which are capable of slowing intestinal transit time and increasing intestinal absorption. Their antidiarrheic action is moderate, and they do not act on
abdominal pain
. Molecules that do not traverse the neuromeningeal barrier but that act selectively on the digestive tract and are better tolerated are expected. In patients complaining of severe idiopathic constipation substances capable of stimulating colonic motility are useful:
substance P
or neurotensin analogues might prove interesting. Antagonists of opium receptors such as Naloxone have proved efficacious in the treatment of certain cases of chronic idiopathic intestinal pseudo-obstructions or severe constipation. The development of orally active substances or with hepatic elimination are a prerequisite. Therapy based on well characterized pathophysiologic abnormalities would be welcome.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Therapeutic perspectives in the irritable bowel syndrome]. 221 Jan 91
In 16 consecutive patients with systemic mastocytosis, we prospectively evaluated a variety of gastrointestinal functions and examined how they relate to the occurrence of gastrointestinal symptoms. Nine patients had either a duodenal ulcer or duodenitis. Hypersecretion of gastric acid was present in 6 patients, and in these patients the mean basal acid output was 20.7 +/- 4.1 mEq/h (range 14-39 mEq/h). Impaired small intestinal absorption occurred in 5 patients, although this was usually mild. The mean fractional emptying rate of liquids for all patients (14.7% +/- 2.3% per minute) did not differ from that for controls (10.7% +/- 0.6% per minute). Mean mouth-to-cecum transit time measured by breath hydrogen testing was the same among patients (87.7 +/- 6.7 min) and controls (86.7 +/- 8.0 min). Plasma histamine concentrations were increased in all patients (mean 1886 pg/ml, range 480-7450) and correlated with the basal acid output (r = 0.64, p less than 0.02) but not maximal acid output or the presence or absence of pain or diarrhea. Mean fasting plasma concentrations of motilin,
substance P
, and neurotensin from 6 patients did not differ significantly from controls, whereas gastrin and vasoactive intestinal peptide were significantly less than in controls (p less than 0.01). Gastrointestinal symptoms, consisting of
abdominal pain
or diarrhea, occurred in 80% of patients.
Abdominal pain
classified as dyspeptic was usually associated with acid-peptic disease of the duodenum and hypersecretion of gastric acid, whereas
abdominal pain
of a nondyspeptic character was not. Only in those cases of diarrhea consisting of greater than 200 g stool/day was gastric acid hypersecretion frequently found. Neither fecal urgency nor nondyspeptic pain could be accounted for by alterations of gastrointestinal transit. These results demonstrate that gastrointestinal symptoms, peptic disease, and mild malabsorption are much more common than described previously in patients with systemic mastocytosis. Furthermore, the results provide no evidence for the contention that altered gastrointestinal transit is involved in the pathogenesis of these symptoms.
...
PMID:Gastrointestinal dysfunction in systemic mastocytosis. A prospective study. 339 14
A 55-year-old woman with an ovarian carcinoid presented with intermittent facial and cervical flushing for 10 years, watery diarrhea for 4 years, and
abdominal pain
without hepatomegaly. Markedly elevated systemic venous and arterial serotonin levels (830 ng/ml; nl = 50-200 ng/ml) were found. The highest serotonin levels were observed in the superior vena caval system, but serotonin as a marker for tumor localization was inaccurate and led to an unproductive neck exploration. The histological pattern of this tumor contained purely insular elements. No hepatic or nodal metastases were identified and the lesion was unilateral.
Substance P
levels were elevated in the venous drainage of the left ovary and in retrospect correctly localized the ovarian tumor. This peptide may prove to be another carcinoid tumor marker in addition to serotonin and 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid.
Substance P
may also be an important mediator of symptoms in patients with carcinoid syndrome.
...
PMID:Substance P in the localization of a carcinoid tumor. 620 86
Changes in immunoreactive (ir)-somatostatin,
substance P
, and calcitonin gene-related peptide concentrations of the human gastric mucosa were examined in subjects with nonulcer dyspepsia (NUD) and peptic ulcer to clarify the relationship between these peptides and dyspeptic symptoms. Fifty-six patients with NUD were divided into two subject subgroups as follows: 22 patients with upper abdominal discomfort, nausea, and/or vomiting (motility disorder group) and 34 patients complaining of upper
abdominal pain
[ulcer-like disorder (UD) group]. These patients were compared with either an age- and sex-matched group of asymptomatic outpatients without any organic disease (control group: n = 51), or to a group with peptic ulcer (PU group: n = 30). Ir-somatostatin concentrations of the gastric mucosa were significantly higher in UD group than in PU, motility disorder, or control group, and ir-
substance P
concentrations in the UD group were higher than in the PU group. No difference in ir-calcitonin gene-related peptide concentrations was observed among the four groups. These results indicate that there may be two distinct subgroups in NUD, and that NUD is not just a stage within the spectrum of peptic ulcer disease from the viewpoint of several gastrointestinal-hormone concentrations of the human gastric mucosa.
...
PMID:Immunoreactive-somatostatin, substance P, and calcitonin gene-related peptide concentrations of the human gastric mucosa in patients with nonulcer dyspepsia and peptic ulcer disease. 768 83
Hepatic porphyrias are characterized by neurological symptoms manifested by
abdominal pain
, neuropathies and mental aberrations. Porphyrins are ubiquitous and essential biochemical constituents of living beings acting as mediators of oxidation reaction in the metabolism of the steroid, drugs, environmental chemicals or as a mean of exchanging gases, such as oxygen and carbon dioxide between the environment and the tissue of the body using endogenous polypeptide properties. The different porphyrins arising from the arrangement of normal heme synthesis are characterized by an accumulation and excretion of specific intermediate porphyrins and/or of precursors exerting toxic effect, initiating cascades of generations of polypeptides, neurotransmitters and gut-brain axis peptide responsible for the symptoms of clinical status. We studied polypeptide levels in 27 patients (19 females, 8 males) presenting acute attack of hepatic porphyria: 2 with ALA dehydratase-deficient porphyria; 9 with acute intermittent porphyria; 12 with porphyria cutanea tarda and 4 with variegate porphyria. During acute attacks of porphyria, polypeptides were found to be constantly increased: vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP); neurotensin (NT);
substance P
; pancreatic polypeptide; gastrin-releasing peptide; gastrin and motilin. Administration of the somatostatin (antagonizing polypeptide), which was undetectable or low before treatment, apparently alleviated the acute symptomatology. Elevated levels of polypeptides, at least partly, contribute to appearance of acute symptoms in porphyria patients.
...
PMID:Polypeptide levels increase during acute onset of hepatic porphyrias. 907 85
Over the past decade, attention has been paid to the role of visceral sensitivity in the pathophysiology of functional bowel disorders, especially irritable bowel syndrome, and visceral hypersensitivity is the most widely accepted mechanism responsible for both motor alterations and
abdominal pain
. Inflammatory mediators sensitize primary afferents, especially C-fibre polymodal nociceptors, favouring the recruitment of silent nociceptors that give rise to secondary spinal sensitization. After local tissue injury, the release of chemical mediators such as potassium ions, ATP, bradykinin and prostaglandin E2 directly activate nerve endings and indirectly trigger the release of algesic mediators such as histamine, 5-hydroxytryptamine and nerve growth factor from other cells, which, in turn, stimulate proximal afferent nerve endings and silent nociceptors. Among the intermediary structures activated by inflammatory mediators and susceptible to the release of proalgesic substances, mast cells and platelets play a crucial role; however, immunocytes such as macrophages and neutrophils or sympathetic nerve terminals are also candidates. Moreover, events likely to activate synthesis of mediators by mast cells, such as stress and septic shock, also trigger colonic hypersensitivity. Prolonged visceral hyperalgesia may also depend on spinal sensitization. A number of substances are candidates to play a role at the spinal cord level in mediating painful and nonpainful sensations. Among them,
substance P
, dynorphins and glutamate play a pivotal role in postsynaptic sensitization, particularly during and after gut inflammation. Finally, despite the complexity of the relationship between inflammatory mediators and gut hypersensitivity, numerous results strongly suggest that alteration neuroimmune communications at the gut level may trigger a series of events that give rise to chronic changes in visceral sensitivity.
...
PMID:Effects of inflammatory mediators on gut sensitivity. 1020 8
Cyclic vomiting syndrome (CVS) remains a mysterious disorder despite our increasing knowledge since its classic description by Gee in 1882. Its hallmark feature of recurrent, explosive bouts of vomiting punctuating periods of normal health causes substantial medical morbidity (50% of patients require intravenous therapy), as well as significant time lost from school (20 school absences per year) and work. Limited epidemiologic data indicate that CVS may occur more commonly than previously thought, affecting as many as 1.9% of school-aged children. Besides the relentless vomiting, the child usually has pallor (87%), lethargy (91%), anorexia (74%), nausea (72%), and
abdominal pain
(80%). There is evidence of clinical and physiologic overlap among CVS, abdominal migraine, and migraine headaches. We propose revised criteria for abdominal migraine that include pain as the predominant and consistent symptom, lack of abnormal screening tests, and in retrospect, either subsequent development of migraines or positive response to antimigraine medication. Besides migraines, other etiologic possibilities include mitochondrial DNA mutations, ion channelopathies, excessive hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis activation, and heightened autonomic reactivity. The differential diagnosis includes idiopathic CVS (88%); gastrointestinal disorders (7%), including serious surgical disorders (e.g., malrotation); and extraintestinal disorders (5%), including serious surgical (brain stem neoplasm) and metabolic disorders (e.g., fatty acid oxidation disorder). Within the idiopathic group, there may be migraine, Sato's neuroendocrine, mitochondrial, and other subgroups. Treatment includes avoidance of triggers, prophylactic medication, supportive care, abortive medication, and family support. In the future, investigation into mitochondrial DNA mutations, ion channel defects, corticotropin-releasing factor, and serotonin and
tachykinin
receptor physiology and pharmacology may help discover the etiology and pathogenesis of this disorder.
...
PMID:Cyclic vomiting syndrome: evolution in our understanding of a brain-gut disorder. 1095 42
Tachykinin NK2 receptors are implicated in nociception and the control of intestinal motility. Here we examined their involvement in responses of spinal lumbosacral neurons with colon input to distension of normal or inflamed colon in anesthetized rats. The responses of single neurons to colorectal distension (5-80 mmHg), to electrical stimulation of the pelvic nerve (bypassing sensory receptors) and to somatic stimulation were characterized. The effect of cumulative doses of an NK2 receptor antagonist, MEN 11420 (10-1000 microg kg(-1) IV), on responses to these stimuli was tested in control conditions (n=6), or 45 min after intracolonic instillation of acetic acid (n=6). After colonic inflammation, neuronal responses to colorectal distension and pelvic nerve stimulation were significantly greater. MEN 11420 dose-dependently inhibited the enhanced responses to colorectal distension after inflammation (ID50=402+/-14 microg kg(-1)), but had no significant effect on responses to pelvic nerve stimulation or distension of the normal colon, suggesting a peripheral action selective for the inflamed colon. We conclude that MEN 11420 possesses peripheral anti-hyperalgesic effects on neuronal responses to colorectal distension. These results provide a neurophysiological basis for a possible use of
tachykinin
NK2 receptor antagonists in treating
abdominal pain
in irritable bowel syndrome patients.
...
PMID:Responses of rat spinal neurons to distension of inflamed colon: role of tachykinin NK2 receptors. 1131 97
Opioid drugs have profound antidiarrheal and constipating actions in the intestinal tract and are effective in mitigating
abdominal pain
. Mediators of intestinal inflammation and allergy produce increased mucosal secretion, altered bowel motility and pain due to their ability to evoke enteric secretomotor reflexes through primary afferent neurons. In this study, the distribution of delta- and kappa-opioid receptor (DOR and KOR, respectively) immunoreactivities in chemically identified neurons of the porcine ileum was compared with that of the capsaicin-sensitive type 1 vanilloid receptor (VR1). DOR and VR1 immunoreactivities were observed to be highly localized in choline acetyltransferase (ChAT)- and calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP)-positive neurons and nerve fibers of the submucosal and myenteric plexuses and both receptors exhibited frequent colocalization. In the inner submucosal plexus, they also were colocalized in
substance P
(SP)-positive neurons. Neurons in the outer submucosal plexus expressed DOR immunoreactivity alone or in combination with VR1. KOR-immunoreactive neurons were found only in the myenteric plexus; these cells coexpressed immunoreactivity to ChAT, CGRP, vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) or nitric oxide synthase (NOS). In addition, some KOR-positive neurons coexpressed immunoreactivities to DOR and VR1. Based on their neurochemical coding, opioid and vanilloid receptor-immunoreactive neurons in the submucosal and myenteric plexuses may include primary afferents and constitute novel therapeutic targets for the palliation of painful intestinal inflammatory, hypersensitivity and dysmotility states.
...
PMID:Chemical coding of neurons expressing delta- and kappa-opioid receptor and type I vanilloid receptor immunoreactivities in the porcine ileum. 1181 Mar 11
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