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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0007095 (
carcinoid
)
6,990
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A selected group of 263 pulmonary neuroendocrine tumours comprised 156 small cell carcinomas, five combined cell carcinomas, nine atypical
carcinoid
/small cell carcinomas, 32 atypical carcinoids, ten large cell/small cell carcinomas, and 51
carcinoid
tumours. These were compared with a group of 109 non-small cell carcinomas, using four markers of neuroendocrine differentiation to determine differences in reactivity between the two groups and among the variants of neuroendocrine tumour. The antibodies used were neuron-specific enolase (NSE), protein gene product (PGP) 9.5, human bombesin, and the C-terminal flanking peptide of human bombesin (CTP). Most small cell carcinomas,
carcinoid
tumours, and atypical
carcinoid
variants showed immunoreactivity for both NSE and
PGP 9.5
but a significant number of non-small cell carcinomas, mainly squamous cell carcinomas, were also positive (11 and 35 per cent, respectively). Bombesin was specific for neuroendocrine tumours, being demonstrable in 35 per cent carcinoids and 24 per cent small cell carcinomas, but staining was focal and often confined to scattered cells. Diffuse strongly positive immunoreactivity for CTP was seen in the majority of malignant neuroendocrine tumours, but only 12 per cent of
carcinoid
tumours were positive and non-small cell carcinomas were negative. CTP is therefore of potential value as a specific marker of malignant neuroendocrine tumours, particularly if the amount of biopsy material is limited and the tumour is an unusual variant, such as atypical
carcinoid
or large cell-small cell carcinoma.
...
PMID:Immunohistochemical markers of small cell carcinoma and related neuroendocrine tumours of the lung. 282 41
Three cases of
carcinoid
tumour of the stomach associated with primary hyperparathyroidism had the clinical and pathological features of a pluriglandular syndrome. Two of the patients showed multiple small polypoid carcinoids in the non-antral stomach, in conjunction with a parathyroid adenoma in one and parathyroid hyperplasia in the other case. One of these patients was also suffering from pernicious anaemia. A third patient had a large metastasising
carcinoid
arising in the gastric body and a parathyroid adenoma. Immunohistochemical stains for
PGP 9.5
were positive in the carcinoids of all three cases. In all cases the carcinoids showed immunoreactivity for gastrin. A positive family history of endocrine hyperplasia and neoplasia was established in one case. It is suggested that patients with gastrointestinal carcinoids and their families should be evaluated for hyperparathyroidism, and patients with hyperparathyroidism presenting with upper gastrointestinal symptoms should undergo endoscopy to rule out gastric
carcinoid
tumours.
...
PMID:Carcinoid tumour of stomach and primary hyperparathyroidism: a new association. 295 64
There is a recognised association between pernicious anaemia and the development of gastric carcinoma, endocrine cell hyperplasia, and
carcinoid
tumour. Multiple endoscopic biopsies from the body mucosa of seven patients with pernicious anaemia showed small intestinal metaplasia with varying degrees of inflammation, fibrosis, and expansion of the lamina propria. Using conventional silver and lead stains, endocrine cells were inconspicuous. Staining for the general neural and neuroendocrine markers NSE and
PGP 9.5
revealed a proliferation of endocrine cells in the epithelium and isolated clumps of endocrine cells in the lamina propria. The clumps were composed of two cell types, either small or large. Some of these endocrine cells showed gastrin, 5HT, VIP and substance P immunoreactivity of varying intensity. Ultrastructurally nine morphologically distinct types of granules were found some of which correlated with the immunohistochemistry. Some separate islands were composed solely of endocrine cells while others had a definite neural component, suggesting that the former arise from 'budding off' of enteroendocrine cells and the latter originate from the neuroendocrine cells of the lamina propria plexus. Thus there may be a dual origin of
carcinoid
tumours.
Carcinoid tumours
associated with pernicious anaemia tend to be multifocal and are infrequent. Less than 50 such cases have hitherto been reported. Our findings of endocrine cells proliferations in seven cases of pernicious anaemia indicate that this may be an adaptive change that occurs frequently and provides the basis on which carcinoids, less frequently, develop.
...
PMID:Pernicious anaemia and mucosal endocrine cell proliferation of the non-antral stomach. 352 38
The cDNA microarray gene profile of gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GISTs) revealed that DOG1 (TMEM16A) gene was mostly expressed in these neoplasms. Immunohistochemically, DOG1 protein was found positive in a significant proportion of GISTs. However, normal tissues' expression of DOG1 is not yet completely studied. Our study intended to identify the DOG1 protein expression in normal adult and fetal tissues, in comparison with that of GISTs, using an anti-DOG1 polyclonal serum. Fourteen CD117/CD34-positive GIST cases were tested for DOG1. Tissue samples from autopsies of 15 human fetuses and 11 adults were tested immunohistochemically on simple or double staining with antibodies raised against: DOG1, insulin, glucagon, somatostatin, NK1,
PGP9.5
, chromogranin A, and synaptophysin. All the tested GISTs were positive for DOG1, with a membranous and cytoplasmic location. The normal tissues showed a distinct positivity for DOG1 only in the endocrine pancreas, in both fetal and adult ones. The other tissues tested showed a weak or negative reaction. The DOG1 staining pattern in the pancreas islets was granular, like that of neuroendocrine markers. The location of DOG1 expression in pancreatic islets was partly similar to neuroendocrine markers chromogranin A,
PGP9.5
, and synaptophysin. The positive cells were situated centrally, in the vicinity of insulin-bearing cells as seen on double staining. DOG1 positivity in fetal and adult pancreatic islets suggests the strong antibody affinity for neuroendocrine cells. Before making a final conclusion regarding the suitability of DOG1 as a new neuroendocrine marker, a large survey of neuroendocrine lesions must be undertaken, including
carcinoid
tumors of various sites and pancreatic endocrine tumors. To the best of our knowledge, this particular localization has not been reported yet for DOG1.
...
PMID:Pancreatic expression of DOG1: a novel gastrointestinal stromal tumor (GIST) biomarker. 1941 27