Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0016382 (flushing)
6,387 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Carcinoid tumours offer a diagnostic and therapeutic challenge. Although new biochemical markers and improved methods for tumour detection, including PET and somatostatin receptor scintigraphy, have been developed during the last two decades many patients are still diagnosed at late stages of the disease. This is supported by the fact that the age of diagnosis is about the same today as it was 10 years ago. It is our opinion that plasma chromogranin A levels should be be determined in all patients which are investigated because of symptoms that might be connected to a neuroendocrine tumour. In cases with flushing or diarrhoea, U-5-HIAA should also be determined and these two tumour markers are enough to diagnose most patients with midgut carcinoid tumours. In patients with foregut or hindgut tumours other specific hormones should be included. For the localization procedure conventional radiological techniques including CT, MRI and ultrasound investigations should be supplemented with somatostatin receptor scintigraphy. Endoscopic ultrasound investigations might in the future be relevant for diagnosis of duodenal carcinoids, whereas gastric and rectal carcinoids are diagnosed by endoscopy. A combination of more aggressive surgery combined with medical treatment such as somatostatin analogues and alpha-interferon has significantly increased the survival rates in patients with classical midgut carcinoid tumours. Metastatic foregut and hindgut tumours are still a therapeutic challenge and it is important in the future to classify all carcinoid tumours based on specific tumour biology patterns. Such a tumour biology based treatment is a prerequisite for a more individually based therapy in the future.
...
PMID:Carcinoid tumours. 911 14

A 65-year-old female was admitted with leg edema by retroperitoneal fibrosis and tricuspid valve incompetence by fibrosis, cutaneous fibrosis, moderate flushing over the upper body without diarrhea. It revealed an ileal carcinoid tumor with hepatic metastases. Octreotide (Sandostatine), tumor excision and interferon alpha 2b treatment led to a regression of flushing and edema, a reduction of fibrosis and a stabilization of the metastatic carcinoid, with normal serotonin levels.
...
PMID:[Edema caused by retroperitoneal and tricuspid fibrosis with sclerodermatous cutaneous involvement disclosing carcinoid tumor. Apropos of a case and review of the literature]. 918 47

The carcinoid syndrome is a result of the release of multiple carcinoid tumor factors, particularly serotonin, kinins, and histamine. These factors cause flushing, hemodynamic instability, right-sided heart disease, bronchospasm, and gastrointestinal symptoms. A through preoperative assessment concentrating on these areas is necessary. The use of invasive monitors perioperatively, with the avoidance of drugs and techniques that can exacerbate the syndrome, is beneficial. Octreotide, both prophylactically and acutely, provides the best medical therapy available.
...
PMID:Update on carcinoid syndrome. 923 98

The effect of short-term treatment with the highly selective serotonin receptor antagonist ondansetron on symptoms and gastric emptying in 11 carcinoid patients was studied. Diarrhoea improved in 6 of 6 patients, nausea in 3 of 4 patients. Flushing was not affected. The rate of gastric emptying increased during ondansetron treatment (P = 0.08). No changes in serotonin in platelets and urinary excretion of 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid were found. It is concluded that ondansetron can improve gastrointestinal symptoms in carcinoid patients and possibly slows gastric emptying.
...
PMID:Effects of ondansetron on gastrointestinal symptoms in carcinoid syndrome. 984 94

Carcinoid tumours in the intestine are slowly growing neuroendocrine tumours. Patients as a rule report symptoms of the carcinoid syndrome: attacks of diarrhoea and of flushing. When the earliest symptoms manifest themselves, metastases are already present, virtually always localized in the liver. At a late stage, heart failure may occur, difficult to treat and caused by fibrosis of the tricuspid valve in the presence of protractedly raised blood serotonin levels. To diagnose carcinoid tumours, use is made of radioactive substances binding to hormone receptors such as 131I-MIBG and 111-In-octreotide. When multiple metastases exist, only palliative treatment is possible. The drugs used are the somatostatin analog octreotide, interferon alpha, radioactive MIBG and non-radioactive MIBG; these drugs may also be used in combination. The therapies mentioned have approximately the same effect: symptoms improve in 60-80%, while 30-50% show a biochemical response, i.e. decrease of the number of breakdown products in the urine of the hormones produced by the tumour; tumour size decreases in 0-12%.
...
PMID:[Carcinoid tumors of the intestines: developments in the Netherlands for diagnosis and palliative treatment]. 1022 Nov 20

Although chromogranin A (CgA) is a recognized marker of neuroendocrine tumours, little is known about the distribution of the CgA-derived peptides, vasostatin (VST) I or II, in these tumours. Rabbit polyclonal antiserum was raised to a fragment of VST I and used to immunostain sections (5 microns) of wax-embedded tumour tissue. Immunoreactivity (IR) was detected using swine anti-rabbit fluorescein secondary antibody and sections were viewed by fluorescence microscopy. Of 24 tumours from patients with lung carcinoids, one was weakly positive, while 23 of 26 ileal carcinoid tumours were immunoreactive. Metastatic deposits from patients with ileal carcinoids also tended to be immunoreactive (9/10). The difference in IR between lung and ileal carcinoid primary tumours did not appear to be related to the metastatic potential, since appendiceal tumours, which seldom metastasize, also tended to be immunoreactive (4/6) for VST I. The strongest IR was recorded in two patients with flushing as a result of ileal carcinoids; five other 'flushers' with ileal carcinoids were also immunopositive for VST I-like IR. By contrast, patients with flushing as a result of lung carcinoids were immunonegative for VST. In conclusion, VST I-like IR may assist in the identification of a secondary deposit from an unknown primary site.
...
PMID:Immunostaining for vasostatin I distinguishes between ileal and lung carcinoids. 1039 86

No statistical evaluation of patients with carcinoid syndrome in a reliable number of cases has been available in the past 35 years. To update our knowledge about the syndrome, we have evaluated from various clinicopathologic viewpoints a large series of patients with the syndrome reported up to date. The data of 748 patients with the syndrome were collected from 8876 carcinoid patients reported in the literature and analyzed by the Gut-Pancreatic Endocrinoma Analyzing System (the Niigata Registry). The results are summarized as follows. 1) The patients with the syndrome had a tendency to be older than those without it. 2) The incidence of the syndrome was 8.4% of 8876 carcinoid patients. 3) Serotonin activities were extremely high in patients with the syndrome as compared to those without it (91.7% versus 26.6%). 4) The rate of metastases was higher in patients with the syndrome than in those without it (84.8% versus 29.2%), and higher in the liver than in lymph nodes among patients with the syndrome (73.4% versus 37.4%). 5) Flushing and carcinoid heart as most specific clinical manifestations of the syndrome were recorded at 78.3% and 17.4%, respectively. 6) The 5-year survival rate after resection of primary lesions was 76.0% of 304 patients with the syndrome, lower in patients with digestive carcinoids than in those with extradigestive lesions (67.2% versus 88.7%). It is expected that the results obtained in the present evaluation on patients with carcinoid syndrome will provide investigators active in this specialized field with useful and extensive information for their future activities.
...
PMID:Carcinoid syndrome: a statistical evaluation of 748 reported cases. 1046 98

Neuroendocrine tumors of the cervix are rare and are often under- or misdiagnosed. Because these tumors are very aggressive, early diagnosis and subsequent treatment are warranted. We describe a 46-yr-old woman with carcinoid syndrome caused by an atypical carcinoid of the uterine cervix. At age 44, she had dysplasia on Pap smear and underwent total abdominal hysterectomy with the diagnosis of adenocarcinoma. Fourteen months postoperatively, she developed the carcinoid syndrome and was found to have numerous liver metastases. Histological and immunohistochemical investigations of biopsy specimens from the patient's liver lesions and original cervical lesion ("adenocarcinoma") suggested that this woman had a primary atypical carcinoid of the uterine cervix with metastases to the liver. Treatment with octreotide and alkylating agents decreased the episodes of flushing and diarrhea within 8 weeks. If an adenocarcinoma of the uterine cervix is diagnosed, atypical carcinoid should be in the differential diagnosis. Symptoms of the carcinoid syndrome should be pursued and, if present, a urinary 5-hydroxyindolacetic acid level should be obtained. Timely diagnosis of a neuroendocrine tumor of the cervix may improve survival.
...
PMID:Carcinoid syndrome caused by an atypical carcinoid of the uterine cervix. 1056 74

Historically, carcinoids are a morphologically distinct class of rare intestinal tumours that behave less aggressively than the more common intestinal adenocarcinomas. Some authors restrict the term carcinoid to intestinal endocrine tumours, and others include a large variety of neuroendocrine tumours. Within the gastrointestinal tract, carcinoids are most commonly found in the appendix, followed by the distal small bowel, rectum and stomach. In the vast majority of cases, the carcinoid syndrome is associated with carcinoid tumours of the small intestine that have metastasised to the liver. Episodic flushing and diarrhoea are the most common initial symptoms. Metastatic disease may require no treatment for months or even years in the patient whose symptoms are not seriously interfering with quality of life and if the tumour is not exhibiting a biologically aggressive growth pattern.
...
PMID:Natural history of intestinal carcinoids. 1060 13

Somatostatin has represented a significant breakthrough in the treatment of patients with hormonally-acting, neuroendocrine gastroenteropancreatic neoplasms, even if its short half-life made it impractical in the clinic. In recent years, new long-acting formulations have been developed from the native peptide. The long-lasting formulation of the somatostatin analogue octreotide (octreotide-LAR) can be administered once-monthly and has been shown to provide similar efficacy to subcutaneous octreotide administered three times a day in the control of flushing and diarrhoea associated with the carcinoid syndrome. Another-long acting somatostatin analogue, lanreotide, is available in a slow-release form, lanreotide-SR. In a multicentre 6-month trial on carcinoid tumour patients, 30 mg lanreotide-SR were administered intramuscularly every 14 days, obtaining the control of symptoms in the majority of subjects. Thus, both octreotide-LAR administered monthly, and lanreotide-SR administered every 10-14 days, have been shown to be an effective tool in the treatment of carcinoid tumours, providing, in addition, a substantial improvement in patient compliance.
...
PMID:Long-acting formulations of somatostatin analogues. 1060 34


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>