Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0013395 (dyspepsia)
4,879 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Nonulcer dyspepsia is a common clinical syndrome whose etiology is unknown. The sensitivity of the gastric mucosa to acid and duodenal contents in 18 patients with nonulcer dyspepsia was studied. The patients had a normal upper gastrointestinal endoscopy and biopsy specimens were obtained for determination of Helicobacter pylori status. Fifteen of the 18 patients were infected with H. pylori. All patients underwent intubation with double-lumen tube and collection of cholecystokinin-stimulated pancretico-biliary secretions. Subsequently, normal saline, 0.1N hydrochloric acid, and autologous duodenal secretions were infused into the stomach in a randomized blinded fashion. A positive response was defined as the production of epigastric pain by acid and/or bile but not by saline. By this definition, only 6 patients (33%) had a positive response and none had reproduction of their usual symptoms. In patients with a negative response, only 4 remained asymptomatic during all infusions. The remaining 8 had symptoms during infusion of saline, 7 of whom also had symptoms during infusion of acid and/or duodenal secretions. Two of these patients had reproduction of their usual symptoms. In conclusion, the gastric mucosa in patients with nonulcer dyspepsia is not abnormally sensitive to acid or duodenal contents.
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PMID:Sensitivity of the gastric mucosa to acid and duodenal contents in patients with nonulcer dyspepsia. 172 75

The irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) is clinically characterized by a wide variety of symptoms, including dyspepsia, flatulence, nausea, cramping abdominal pain, constipation and/or diarrhea, and nonspecific symptoms, probably reflecting autonomic nervous system overreactivity. Physiologically, the colonic motor abnormality is characterized by an altered slow-wave rhythm, quantitative differences from normal in the repetitive contraction pattern of the rectosigmoid area, and increased colonic muscle responsiveness to hormones such as cholecystokinin and pentagastrin. The diagnosis of IBS involves practical and ethical considerations as well as the need for decisive reassurance of the patient through judicious examination. Treatment of IBS requires a thoughtful and sensitive approach to the patient, recognition of IBS as an important clinical problem, regularization of bowel function, relief of the abdominal discomfort, and intelligent emotional support.
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PMID:The irritable bowel syndrome. A clinical review and ethical considerations. 701 25

In patients who present with chronic unexplained upper abdominal pain or discomfort (functional dyspepsia), therapy should ideally be targeted on correcting the individual's disturbed pathophysiology. Here, putative mechanisms implicated in functional dyspepsia and potential approaches to therapy are critically reviewed in order to determine if targeting treatment is of value. Pharmacological therapies reviewed include those that aim to correct disordered gastric emptying (e.g. cisapride, dopaminergic receptor antagonists, macrolides), reduce visceral hypersensitivity (e.g. somatostatin analogues, cholecystokinin antagonists, opioid agonists, serotonin type 3 receptor antagonists), reduce gastric acid secretion (e.g. H2-blockers, acid pump inhibitors), cure Helicobacter pylori infection, enhance muscosal defence (e.g. sucralfate, bismuth) or modify central nervous system processes. It is concluded that the imperfectly understood pathophysiology of functional dyspepsia contributes to the paucity of established efficacious therapies.
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PMID:Review article: functional dyspepsia--should treatment be targeted on disturbed physiology? 760 50

In clinical practice, exogenous pancreatic enzymes are administered for the treatment of pancreatogenic steatorrhea or with the intention to relieve pain due to chronic pancreatitis. Moreover, a large number of patients take pancreatin (i.e., exogenous pancreatic enzymes) for functional dyspepsia. The effect of exogenous pancreatic enzymes on the enteropancreatic axis is a complex issue. Intraduodenal but not intrajejunal protease activity appears to exert a dose-dependent negative feedback on exocrine pancreatic secretion. Only enzymes with a proteolytic activity but not amylase and lipase exert a control on pancreatic secretion. The mechanism responsible for this feedback regulation is debated, but the cholinergic system seems to play a major role. Intraduodenal pancreatic enzymes (pancreatin) lead to an increased release of pancreatic polypeptide but do not affect the release of insulin and glucagon. In addition, pancreatic enzymes have an influence on the release of some gastrointestinal hormones (i.e., cholecystokinin, motilin, gastric inhibitory polypeptide). Neither exogenous nor endogenous pancreatic enzymes seem to play a major role in the regulation of interdigestive gastrointestinal motility. However, an adequate rate of postprandial pancreatic output is required to control gastric emptying. Current knowledge on the effect of exogenous pancreatic enzymes on the enteropancreatic axis, gut peptide release and gastrointestinal motility are updated in the present article.
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PMID:Effect of exogenous pancreatic enzymes on gastrointestinal and pancreatic hormone release and gastrointestinal motility. 822 68

Cholecystokinin (CCK) belongs to the group of substances known as brain-gut peptides: it functions both as a neuropeptide and a gut hormone. The peptide and its synthetic derivatives (like for instance CCK-8 and the amphibian counterpart caerulein) significantly delay emptying of gastric contents in both animals and humans. The fact that CCK, in doses mimicking postprandial plasma levels, strongly affects emptying rate suggests the peptide to be a physiologic regulator of gastric emptying. Unfortunately, clear definition of the role of CCK in the physiology of gastric motor activity has long been hampered by the lack of specific and potent non-peptide antagonists of CCK-receptors. The availability of such compounds has stimulated a broad array of investigations into the physiological actions of this hormone and examination of its putative role in certain diseases. This paper summarizes the available data concerning the effect of CCK and its antagonists on gastric emptying. The use of selective CCK-antagonists has allowed to establish that the gastric motor effect of the peptide is direct and mediated through the stimulation of CCK-A receptors. As a consequence, CCK-A antagonism results in acceleration of emptying rate under certain experimental and clinical conditions. This peculiar pharmacologic effect of CCK-A antagonists, which could be useful in the treatment of functional dyspepsia (idiopathic or diabetic), gastroparesis and gastro-esophageal reflux disease (where patients often display a delayed emptying rate of solid food) needs to be further investigated, in order to fully explore their potential as gastrokinetic drugs.
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PMID:Effect of CCK and its antagonists on gastric emptying. 829 6

From 1990 through 1993, we treated 36 patients with recurrent typical biliary colic but who showed no ultrasonic evidence of cholelithiasis by laparoscopic cholecystectomy. Associated symptoms included nausea (75%), bloating (56%), fatty-food intolerance (53%), vomiting (17%), weight loss (31%), bowel irregularity (28%), reflux or dyspepsia (25%), and fever (17%). Diagnostic evaluation included ultrasound (100%), upper gastrointestinal series (36%), oral cholecystogram (14%), computed tomographic scan (39%), endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (17%), upper gastrointestinal endoscopy (14%), and hepatobiliary scan (92%). Quantitative hepatobiliary scans in 33 patients revealed a low gallbladder ejection fraction (EF) of less than 35% in 29 patients (88%; mean EF = 9%), and 13 patients experienced reproducible pain after cholecystokinin provocation. All patients underwent attempted laparoscopic cholecystectomy; one case of unsuspected acute acalculous cholecystitis was converted to open laparotomy because of unclear anatomy. Gross and histological examination of the gallbladders revealed chronic inflammation (83%), cholesterolosis (31%), cholesterol crystals or small stones (17%), acute inflammation (8%), polyps (6%), and normal histology (6%); however, blind retrospective scoring of gallbladders revealed significant chronic inflammation in only 38%. In the 2 to 40 months (mean, 14 months) since operation, there have been no deaths (97% follow-up). Laparoscopic cholecystectomy relieved pain in 93% of patients with a low preoperative EF compared with 75% of patients with a normal EF (nonsignificant p value). Persistent abdominal or gastrointestinal complaints included flatulence (31%), loose stools or fecal urgency (29%), belching (29%), indigestion (20%), nausea (11%), and "typical" gallbladder pain (9%). We conclude that many patients with symptoms of biliary colic and scintigraphic evidence of biliary dyskinesia have histologic findings of chronic cholecystitis. Although laparoscopic cholecystectomy usually eliminates biliary colic, persistent nonbiliary complaints are frequent.
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PMID:Chronic acalculous cholecystitis: laparoscopic treatment. 868 Jun 33

Liver affects the release and clearance of many hormones, but the interactions between gastrointestinal peptides and liver function are obscure. Aim of this study was to evaluate plasma concentrations of gastrointestinal peptides during acute hepatic cytonecrosis and during liver regeneration in man. The study was performed in ten patients with viral hepatitis (8 virus A, 2 virus B) in the acute phase (alanine transaminase = 3073 +/- 739 U/L; mean +/- SEM), and at days 7, 45 and 52 after the initial evaluation, during clinical and biochemical recovery (52nd day, alanine transaminase = 77 +/- 26). Plasma concentrations of the following hormones were evaluated by radioimmunoassay: glucagon, insulin, gastrin, vasoactive intestinal peptide, bombesin, neurotensin, cholecystokinin, secretin and motilin. Only serum bombesin and cholecystokinin were significantly (p < 0.01) increased in the acute phase of hepatitis (bombesin: 138 +/- 21 pg/ml; cholecystokinin: 57 +/- 7 pg/ml); they returned to normal values during convalescence (bombesin: 60 +/- 8; cholecystokinin: 31 +/- 4). During hepatocellular necrosis, plasma concentrations of cholecystokinin and bombesin, which are both cellular growth factors and regulatory signals of food introduction and satiety state, were increased by 83% and 130%, respectively. Increase of these hormones may cause the dyspepsia and lack of appetite that characterizes the initial phase of acute viral hepatitis.
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PMID:Gastrointestinal peptide hormones in acute viral hepatitis. 878

Bile analysis is performed on duodenal bile obtained after stimulation of the gallbladder (GB) with cholecystokinin or its analog. Rapid amino acids (AA) infusion contracts the GB. Our objective was to assess qualitatively the adequacy of duodenal bile obtained following AA infusion. We prospectively studied 15 patients each with non ulcer dyspepsia (NUD) and gallstones (GS), and 17 patients with acute idiopathic pancreatitis (AIP). Duodenal bile was obtained after duodenal intubation and stimulation of GB by rapid AA infusion. The GB contractile response to AA infusion was assessed by functional ultrasonography. Bile was analyzed for lipids, nucleation time, cholesterol saturation index (CSI), and biliary crystals. Adequate duodenal bile could be collected in all but one patient with AIP and one with GS. The mean +/- SD percent ejection fraction of GB following AA infusion in patients with NUD, GS and AIP was 53.41 +/- 16.23, 52.06 +/- 16.07, and 43.37 +/- 14.16, respectively. Biliary microscopy showed the presence of cholesterol monohydrate crystals (CMC) in 7 of 16 patients with AIP, 12 of 14 patients with GS, and 1 of 15 patients with NUD. Mean CSIs in patients with NUD, GS, CMC-positive AIP, and CMC-negative AIP were 0.78, 1.97, 1.85, and 1.00, respectively. Nucleation time in patients with NUD and gallstones was 21.1 and 8.42 days. respectively. In conclusion, qualitatively adequate bile can be obtained for chemical and microscopic examination following rapid intravenous infusion of AA to stimulate the GB.
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PMID:Stimulation of gallbladder by intravenous infusion of amino acid: a new method to obtain duodenal bile for bile analyses. 1079 53

There is no general agreement as regards the effect of Helicobacter pylori infection on gastric emptying in patients with functional dyspepsia. Food releases several gastrointestinal hormones, and some of these are known to contribute to the regulation of gastric emptying. The aim of this study was to investigate the influence of H. pylori on gastric emptying in dyspeptic and healthy subjects and to verify whether different hormone secretion patterns are affected by the presence of the bacterium. Twenty-seven patients affected by functional dyspepsia and 30 asymptomatic healthy subjects entered the study. H. pylori presence was assessed in controls by IgG antibodies to H. pylori and [13C] urea breath test, and that in patients by Warthin-Starry stain on gastric biopsies. After ingesting a standard solid-liquid meal, an ultrasound examination of gastric emptying was performed. Plasma concentrations of gastrin, cholecystokinin, and pancreatic polypeptide were measured in the fasting and postprandial period for 4 hours. The incidence of H. pylori infection was not higher in functional dyspepsia patients than in controls. As regards gastric emptying, no difference was detected between patients and controls with and without H. pylori infection. On the contrary, the presence of H. pylori infection determined alterations in gastrin levels, which were higher in controls than in patients. Basal CCK levels were higher in the H. pylori-negative patients than H. pylori-positive patients and controls. In conclusion, H. pylori infection seems not to cause alterations in gastric emptying, but rather alterations in gastrin levels. In contrast, the altered levels of CCK account for its involvement in the pathophysiology of H. pylori-negative dyspepsia.
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PMID:Effect of Helicobacter pylori infection on gastric emptying and gastrointestinal hormones in dyspeptic and healthy subjects. 1127 Jul 93

Previous studies have shown that patients with chronic alcohol ingestion may show a variety of morphological and functional alterations in the small intestine. In this study, we have focused on the neuroendocrine system in the duodenal mucosa in chronic alcoholics; an area little studied. Twenty-three defined chronic alcoholics admitted to the hospital for detoxification underwent clinical examination, followed by upper gastrointestinal endoscopy and blood tests on average 4 days after the most recent alcohol intake. Biopsy specimens were taken from the distal part of the descending duodenum for both immunohistochemical and routine histological examination. The control group consisted of 25 patients referred for upper endoscopy mainly because of dyspepsia (ulcer, reflux type), but who were otherwise healthy. A normal carbohydrate-deficient transferrin and a history of low alcohol consumption (<40 g/week) were required for inclusion in the control group. The tissue specimens were studied using antisera for the following neuropeptides: cholecystokinin, galanin, gastric inhibitory peptide (GIP), glucagon, motilin, neuropeptide Y, pituitary adenylyl cyclase activating peptide, secretin, serotonin, somatostatin, substance P, vasoactive intestinal polypeptide and protein gene product, as a general marker for neurones and cells of the diffuse neuroendocrine system. The density of nerve fibres was evaluated semi-quantitatively and the number of endocrine cells per unit length of mucosa was counted in sections cut perpendicularly to the mucosal surface. All the different peptidergic nerve fibres in the alcohol group showed higher densities than the corresponding controls. However, this was not a statistically significant difference. A slightly significant increase (P = 0.02) in the numbers of glucagon and GIP cells was seen in the alcohol group. Gastrointestinal symptoms were frequently present (87%) in chronic alcoholics. We suggest that chronic alcohol consumption in man may have a general effect on the peptidergic nerve system and some endocrine cell types in the duodenal mucosa.
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PMID:Neuropeptides in the duodenal mucosa of chronic alcoholic heavy drinkers. 1137 57


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