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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (
diabetes
)
277,896
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Exocrine secretory function in response to 10 pM to 10 nM synthetic
secretin
was evaluated in perfused pancreas isolated from control, streptozocin-induced diabetic (STZ-D), alloxan-induced diabetic (ALX-D), and insulin-treated STZ-D rats. In STZ-D rats, the basal rate of pancreatic juice flow was significantly increased (10.3 +/- 1.0 microliters/20 min) compared with control rats (4.4 +/- 0.2 microliters/20 min). The basal rate of amylase output as well as pancreatic amylase content were significantly decreased to less than 5% of control values. The basal rates of protein and trypsinogen outputs were similar in both groups. In both control and diabetic rats,
secretin
caused a dose-dependent increase in exocrine secretion.
Secretin
(10 pM to 10 nM) induced 1.1- to 11.7-fold increases in exocrine secretion in STZ-D rats. These increases were significantly lower than the 2.1- to 20.8-fold increases in control rats. Furthermore, there was no significant increase in exocrine secretion from STZ-D rats in response to 10 pM
secretin
, although this concentration of
secretin
caused a significant increase in control rats.
Secretin
-induced exocrine secretion in ALX-D rats was similar to that in STZ-D rats. In insulin-treated STZ-D rats, the basal rates of pancreatic secretion were not significantly different from those of control rats. These results suggest that insulin resistance in this patient was due to a circulating factor of low molecular weight that uncoupled insulin stimulation of glucose transport from receptor binding and phosphorylation. The factor appears to increase the binding activity of the alpha-subunit of the insulin receptor without affecting the kinase activity of the beta-subunit.
Diabetes
1988 Sep
PMID:Secretin-induced exocrine secretion in perfused pancreas isolated from diabetic rats. 245 29
A disturbed intraduodenal milieu and pancreatic scarring in advanced chronic pancreatitis (CP) may lead to changes of gut and pancreatic hormones. In the present study, the gastroduodenal mucosal content of several regulatory peptides was determined in 8 patients with severe calcific CP and 8 healthy volunteers. In addition, hormone release into the bloodstream was estimated after intraduodenal acid/glucose stimulation in the control subjects and 8 CP patients each with or without secondary
diabetes mellitus
(DM), and in 8 patients with juvenile DM, so that disturbed gut hormone release could be attributed either to CP or DM. While VIP release into the circulation was similar in all participants, mucosal levels of VIP and substance P were significantly elevated in the duodenal bulb and descending duodenum of CP patients. The somatostatin content of gastroduodenal mucosa in CP was at least as high as in normals. Gastrin was significantly more abundant only in the duodenal bulb of CP patients, while plasma gastrin was normal. Duodenal CCK concentrations tended to be elevated in the duodenal bulb, but not significantly. The release of
secretin
seemed to be higher in type-1 diabetics than in CP patients. The mucosal pattern of GIP was nearly identical in CP patients and controls. Compatible with this finding, the GIP release did not show any peculiarities in CP with or without DM or in DM. Basal and stimulated plasma levels of motilin were abnormally high in CP. Pancreatic polypeptide plasma levels were normal in DM, but significantly reduced in CP, especially in CP with DM. Fasting PP and stimulated pancreatic enzyme outputs were linearly related.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Chronic pancreatitis and diabetes mellitus: plasma and gastroduodenal mucosal profiles of regulatory peptides (gastrin, motilin, secretin, cholecystokinin, gastric inhibitory polypeptide, somatostatin, VIP, substance P, pancreatic polypeptide, glucagon, enteroglucagon, neurotensin). 246 85
It was established during observation over time (within the period from 10 to 12 years) that the overwhelming majority of patients with chronic cholecystopancreatitis and primary chronic pancreatitis progressed to a different degree to enzyme-secreting pancreatic failure according to the pancreozymine tests. At the same time in 2/5 of all the cases, enzyme-secreting failure turned out substantial by the end of the indicated period. During the years of prospective studies, every tenth patient with chronic pancreatitis developed secondary
diabetes mellitus
. The degree of pancreatic enzyme secretion and carbohydrate metabolism abnormalities depended on the number of disease exacerbations suffered by the patient. Secondary gastroduodenal ulcers occurred in 27 out of 647 patients observed over time, and all the cases were associated with a considerable reduction of pancreatic bicarbonate secretion (according to the
secretin
test). Pancreatogenous pleural exudate was recorded in 1.4% of all the cases of chronic pancreatitis. During the observation period, 16 out of the 647 patients died from chronic pancreatitis associated with progressive exocrine pancreatic failure and malabsorption.
...
PMID:[A prospective multiyear study of the course of chronic recurrent pancreatitis]. 258 77
Protein- and fat-rich test meals elicit a strong stimulatory effect on postprandial somatostatin (SLI) and pancreatic polypeptide (PP) release, whereas carbohydrate-rich meals rather attenuate the response of both hormones. Since there is evidence that intestinal hormones might contribute to the postprandial SLI and PP response, it was the aim of the present study to determine in dogs the effect of low-dose cholecystokinin octapeptide (CCK-8) on basal hormone levels and also during a background infusion of amino acids or glucose. In a group of six conscious dogs, sulfated CCK-8 was infused intravenously (i.v.) via a hindleg vein at stepwise increasing infusion rates of 10, 30, and 50 pmol X kg-1 X h. The infusion of CCK was applied during a background infusion of saline (2 ml/min), glucose (0.2 g/min), or an amino acid mixture (8.5%, 2 ml/min). CCK-8 had no effect on plasma insulin and glucagon levels under all experimental conditions. Plasma SLI levels were significantly stimulated by all doses of CCK. This stimulatory effect was similar during background infusions of either saline, glucose, or amino acids, respectively. Pancreatic polypeptide (PP) levels rose 200-300 pg/ml during CCK plus saline. This was slightly attenuated by glucose. During CCK plus amino acids, the PP response was augmented to 600-800 pg/ml. Since
secretin
is also released after the ingestion of a meal and intraduodenal acidification is a potent stimulus not only of
secretin
but also of gastric and pancreatic SLI release, the effect of
secretin
was examined additionally.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Diabetes
1986 May
PMID:Modulatory effect of glucose, amino acids, and secretin on CCK-8-induced somatostatin and pancreatic polypeptide release in dogs. 286 95
SMS 201-995 (5-100 micrograms) injected subcutaneously in normal and type-2 diabetic subjects 30 min before a test meal caused dose-related suppression of plasma concentrations of insulin, glucagon, and several regulatory gut peptide hormones (gastrin, gastric inhibitory peptide, pancreatic polypeptide,
secretin
, neurotensin, and motilin). Effective hormone suppression was achieved even at the lowest dose of 5 micrograms. In the normal subjects SMS caused postprandial hyperglycaemia, but there was no overall deterioration in glucose tolerance in the type-2 diabetic patients. This suggests that counterregulatory hormones play an important part in the metabolic disturbance of type-2
diabetes
.
...
PMID:Postprandial effects of SMS 201-995 on gut hormones and glucose tolerance. 287 9
Pancreatic polypeptide (PP) may function as a regulator of satiety. Its secretion is impaired in certain animal models of obesity and the administration of PP may improve the hyperphagia and hyperinsulinism seen in these animals. In obese humans, decreased, normal or increased, basal and stimulated concentrations of PP in plasma have been reported. However the advent of
diabetes
confounds the picture since PP levels in
diabetes
are generally raised. We have therefore examined the PP responses to intravenous
secretin
, a known PP secretagogue, in 23 obese subjects, 12 with normal and 11 with abnormal glucose tolerance, and compared the results with those in 23 age and sex-matched healthy controls. The mean maximum PP level in obese subjects with normal glucose tolerance (98 +/- 13 pg/ml) was significantly less than that in normal subjects (218 +/- 23 pg/ml) but in obese subjects with abnormal glucose tolerance, it was significantly greater (578 +/- 115 pg/ml). Within each of the 3 study groups taken separately, PP response to
secretin
was not correlated with glucose or insulin levels, or with the degree of obesity. Thus, obesity per se appears to be associated with impaired PP responses, which may be masked by abnormalities in glucose tolerance.
...
PMID:Pancreatic polypeptide response to secretin in obesity: effects of glucose intolerance. 304 79
A long-term follow-up study revealed that
diabetes
, diarrhea and dumping syndrome were the major complications after pancreaticoduodenectomy. The PABA recovery rate in PFD test was markedly decreased in patients with pancreaticoduodenectomy, suggesting that impaired exocrine pancreatic function is the main cause of the complications. A 24-hour profile of pancreatic juice secretion more than 1.5 months after operation, showed that pancreatic juice was rich in protein and amylase, and secretion was increased following a meal and early in the morning. Gastrin, CCK and VIP were not detected during these periods; however,
secretin
and motilin were increased. These results suggest that pancreatic exocrine function recovered in patients with pancreaticoduodenectomy and
secretin
and motilin played an important role in the regulation of these functions.
...
PMID:[Diurnal profile of gastrointestinal hormones following pancreatectomy]. 322 98
We determined by the ninhydrin method the plasma amino acid (AA) levels prior to, during and following, a 1-hour i.v. infusion of 1 U/kg body weight each of
secretin
and pancreozymin in patients with normal (n = 74) or reduced (n = 39) exocrine pancreatic function, as assessed by the duodenal aspiration test. The results of the two tests correlated significantly with each other (p less than 0.001). A maximum AA decrease of greater than or equal to 12% was observed in all patients with a normally functioning pancreas (specificity 100%), and of less than 12% in all patients with medium to high-grade impairment of pancreatic function (sensitivity 100%). Since, however, low-grade pancreas insufficiency (20-40% of the mean normal enzyme output) is recognized in fewer than one-half of the cases, the overall sensitivity of the AA-consumption test decreases to 69%. The results can, however, be improved by: 1) Calculating the mean percentage AA decrease with a limit value of 5% (sensitivity 90%); 2) determining individual AA with pancreas-specific absorption, such as serine (sensitivity 92%); 3) dropping the lower normal value of exocrine pancreatic function to 25% of the normal mean enzyme output (sensitivity 96%). Diseases that may be associated with the most common condition that causes pancreatic insufficiency--chronic pancreatitis--and which have an influence on AA metabolism, such as cirrhosis of the liver and
diabetes mellitus
, have no influence on the accuracy of the AA consumption test, which, considered overall, represents a competitive alternative to other tubeless tests of pancreatic function.
...
PMID:[Amino acid level in plasma--expressed as alpha-amino-nitrogen--reaction to stimulation of the exocrine pancreas: approaches to a new pancreatic function test]. 343 Oct 32
In 11 persons with normal pancreas function and 21 patients with chronic pancreatitis serum levels of insulin and C-peptide were measured under basal conditions and after maximal stimulation with glucose-tolbutamide-glucagon. Patients with the highest excretory deficiency in the
secretin
-pancreozymin test had the most marked impairment in endocrine function. In patients with manifest
diabetes
the exocrine capacity was reduced to an average of 10% of normal. The endocrine parameters correlated linearly with the exocrine ones, most markedly C-peptide reserve with pancreatic enzyme secretion.
...
PMID:[Reduction of insulin reserves and exocrine pancreatic secretion in chronic pancreatitis]. 388 Dec 38
The degree of correlation between exocrine pancreatic function and endocrine secretory capacity was examined in 13 chronic pancreatitis patients with secondary
diabetes mellitus
, 8 chronic pancreatitis patients without
diabetes
, and 11 healthy subjects. The two parameters were studied under maximal stimulation (volume-corrected
secretin
-pancreozym test and glucose-tolbutamide-glucagon provocation, respectively). A close, linear correlation was found between all endocrine variables and pancreatic acinar function (e.g. rs = 0.77 for chymotrypsin output and C-peptide release; p less than 0.0001). The correlation was less strong with pancreatic bicarbonate output (e.g. rs = 0.49 for C-peptide release; p less than 0.05). In our patients, secondary overt
diabetes
occurred in chronic pancreatitis when protease outputs were, on an average, reduced to about 10% of the mean maximal protease output of normal subjects.
...
PMID:Beta-cell reserve capacity in chronic pancreatitis. 388 12
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