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

Acute renal failure occurred in a patient with a carcinoid syndrome whenever he developed a flushing episode. Renal biopsy performed during one of these oliguric episodes did not reveal any lesions which could explain this reversible form of renal insufficiency. Urinary indices were not conclusive. Alteration of intrarenal hemodynamics by vasoactive compounds is proposed to be the causative mechanism of this relapsing acute oliguric renal failure.
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PMID:Functional acute renal failure in a patient with carcinoid syndrome. 369 18

A patient with the midgut carcinoid syndrome with severe diarrhoea and proven hypersecretion of serotonin (5-HT) was treated with low doses of verapamil perorally. During treatment the patient was completely relieved of diarrhoea but discrete facial flushing persisted during treatment. When treatment was cessated, diarrhoeas recurred. This patient underwent pentagastrin (PG) provocation repeatedly; during untreated conditions injection of PG released 5-HT, detectable in peripheral venous blood. Such release was abolished during verapamil treatment, but recurred after withdrawal of the drug. Surgical biopsies from this tumour were studied in two experimental models: cell suspensions and heterotransplants grown in the anterior eye-chamber of immunosuppressed rats. Release of 5-HT from the cell suspensions was elicited in a dose-dependent manner after stimulation with isoprenaline (IP) suggesting activation of beta-adrenoceptors on the tumour cells. Such release was reduced after pretreatment with verapamil indicating a calcium dependent mechanism. Intraocular tumour transplants also responded with release of 5-HT into the chamber fluid after conjunctival application of IP. However, pretreatment of the rats with verapamil significantly reduced the IP-stimulated release of 5-HT.
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PMID:Verapamil and diarrhoea in the carcinoid syndrome--clinical and experimental observations on serotonin release. 374 62

Carcinoids are solid tumours arising from enterochromaffin cells, usually of the gastrointestinal or respiratory tract. They are fairly common, and in autopsy series have been present in up to 1% of cases. In contrast the carcinoid syndrome--the combination of flushing, diarrhoea, wheezing and heart disease due to release of vasoactive substances from these tumours--is rare. One estimate is that in a population of 250 000 over 10 years only two new cases would arise (Linell and Mansson, 1966).
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PMID:Carcinoid syndrome. Medical management. 374 26

Eighteen patients with metastatic carcinoid were treated by hepatic artery embolization with Gelfoam or polyvinyl alcohol foam for control of the carcinoid syndrome. Seventeen showed subjective or objective clinical improvement, including less skin flushing, diarrhea, and bronchospasm. Fourteen showed improvement in biochemical indices, including decreased urinary 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid levels. The mean life span of the treated patients from the first episode of flushing to the time of this report was 5.4 years, and half of the patients are still alive. This survival time compares favorably with previous reports of survival of 3.2 years from the onset of flushing.
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PMID:Control of carcinoid syndrome with hepatic artery embolization. 400 62

Radioimmunoassays based on antisera raised against the tachykinins eledoisin (antiserum E7) and kassinin (antiserum K12) were used to measure the concentration of tachykinin-like immunoreactivity (TKLI) in plasma from 52 healthy subjects. 65 patients with carcinoid tumors (of which 46 had symptoms of both flushing and diarrhoea), and 6 patients with endocrine pancreatic tumors. The antisera did not crossreact with substance P (SP). Elevated concentrations of TKLI, as compared with healthy subjects, were found in 75% of the carcinoid patients, but in none of the patients with pancreatic tumors. Tumor metastases from 8 of the carcinoid patients all contained TKLI. Ion-exchange chromatography of plasma samples and tumor tissue extracts indicated the presence of several immunoreactive molecular forms. The elution patterns of the immunoreactivity detected by antisera E7 and K12 were similar, indicating that the same molecular species are measured by these antisera. None of the components coeluted with synthetic SP. One of the immunoreactive components in carcinoid tumor extracts coeluted with synthetic NKA. The major immunoreactive components in plasma from the patients eluted in a position different from that of all currently known mammalian tachykinins. Tachykinin immunoreactive material detected in tumor tissue and plasma of patients with carcinoid tumor may play a role in the symptomatology of the carcinoid syndrome.
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PMID:Antisera raised against eledoisin and kassinin detect elevated levels of immunoreactive material in plasma and tumor tissues from patients with carcinoid tumors. 608 59

The effects of synthetic cyclic somatostatin 14 were studied in two patients with the carcinoid syndrome. The 3-hour intravenous administration of somatostatin (250 micrograms X h-1), a) resulted in the disappearance of flushing in the first patient but was without any clinical effect in the second subject who remained chronically colored; b) lowered plasma levels of motilin, prostaglandins (E1, E2 and F2 alpha) and to a lesser extent of catecholamines in both patients whereas the serotonin level was not altered; c) was followed by a rebound effect with recurrence of severe flushing in the first patient and was associated with a dramatic increase of prostaglandin, substance P and catecholamine levels in both patients. The inhibitory effect of somatostatin and the occurrence of a rebound effect at the end of infusion were confirmed by infusing somatostatin (6 mg per day) during 48 h in the first patients. These results: a) show that somatostatin is an effective drug in carcinoid syndrome with severe flushing; b) confirm that several mediators are affected in carcinoid syndrome. However it could not be excluded that increased circulating levels of prostaglandins, substance P and catecholamines may represent unrelated secondary events; c) suggest that somatostatin primarily inhibits the release rather than the synthesis of tumor products. Owing to the severity of the rebound effect, treatment of the carcinoid syndrome with somatostatin must be undertaken with precaution until specific long-acting analogs are available.
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PMID:[Effects of the administration of somatostatin 14 in the carcinoid syndrome. Clinical and biological study of 2 cases]. 614 Nov 19

The patient was a 60-year-old Japanese male. He complained of epigastralgia and right chest pain of 4 month's duration, and general malaise, nausea and vomiting of 2 month's duration. Physical examination revealed on the right third rib a tender mass with a diameter of 2 cm and hepatomegaly with a multi-nodular surface and red palms. There were no signs of carcinoid syndrome, such as cutaneous flushing. Laboratory examinations disclosed certain biochemical alterations; alkaline phosphatase 810 IU/l, gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase (gamma-GTP) 2090 IU/l, carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) 23.5 ng/ml and alpha-fetoprotein (AFP) 6,800 ng/ml. Both HBs-Ag and HBs-Ab were negative. The patient died in a uremic state, with rapid increases of jaundice and ascites. Autopsy revealed gastric carcinoid with extensive metastases to the liver and the bone marrow. Tumor cells showed argyrophilia but not argentaffinity. Immunofluorescence specific for AFP was positive in the hepatocytes, particularly those adjacent to the metastatic tumor cells but not in the tumor cells, either primary or secondary. 79 cases reported in Japan of serum AFP-positive malignant tumor other than hepatocellular carcinoma and certain other malignancies of germ cell origin are reviewed and discussed.
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PMID:Serum alpha-fetoprotein-positive gastric carcinoid with liver metastasis. 616 67

Platelet serotonin, dopamine and norepinephrine concentrations were determined with sensitive and specific radioenzymatic methods in normal volunteers and in sick subjects with both normal and increased serotonin production. In the assays, a 3H-labeled methyl group is transferred from [3H]S-adenosyl methionine to the monoamine under investigation by a semi-purified enzyme. The platelet serotonin concentration (expressed as pmol serotonin/mg platelet protein) was significantly higher in the patients with increased serotonin production from carcinoid tumors (5400 +/-0 500) than in the normal volunteers (900 +/- 100) or the sick subjects with normal serotonin production (900 +/- 100). Although eight of the subjects with increased serotonin production had symptoms of the carcinoid syndrome such as flushing and diarrhea, two of the subjects with increased serotonin production did not have these symptoms. The radioenzymatic method of platelet serotonin measurement was as effective as a conventional fluorometric technique for serum serotonin in detecting patients with serotonin overproduction from carcinoid tumors, and had the advantages of being more sensitive and specific. The great sensitivity and specificity of the radioenzymatic techniques suggest that it might be useful in evaluating disease states in which platelet serotonin is decreased. Using these techniques we found that dopamine and norepinephrine were also present in platelets, although in much lower amounts than serotonin. Despite the markedly increased serotonin concentration in the platelets of subjects with serotonin overproduction from carcinoid tumors, there was no alteration in the dopamine or norepinephrine concentration of their platelets.
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PMID:Radioenzymatic assay of platelet serotonin, dopamine and norepinephrine in subjects with normal and increased serotonin production. 616 11

The mechanisms of flushing reactions are pharmacologically and physiologically heterogeneous. Flushing may result from agents acting directly on the vascular smooth muscle or may be mediated by vasomotor nerves. Vasomotor nerves may lead to flushing as a result of events at both peripheral and central sites. In susceptible persons, frequent, intense flushing leads to a cluster of physical signs (rosacea). Flushing provoked by alcohol has been associated with ethnic sensitivity, a possible predisposition to alcoholism, various disulfiramlike agents, one type of diabetes mellitus, and the carcinoid syndrome and other types of neoplasia. Flushing reactions also occur during the menopause, after glutamate ingestion, and in response to oral thermal challenges.
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PMID:Flushing reactions: consequences and mechanisms. 616

Thirty patients with symptoms of the carcinoid syndrome and other symptoms not controlled by pharmacological agents were analysed with respect to the value of various treatment measures used. Tumour devascularization was carried out in 11 patients, either by surgical ligation of the main hepatic artery (6) or by percutaneous arterial embolization (5). The latter was shown to be the safer technique, both with respect to initial morbidity/mortality and other side effects. Control of flushing and diarrhoea was achieved in 80% and the technique was also repeated on one occasion with success when symptoms recurred. The use of cytotoxic drugs alone, including 5-fluorouracil, cyclophosphamide and Adriamycin produced symptomatic relief in only 4 of the 22 patients treated. They should only be considered if devascularization by arterial embolization proves impossible or cannot be repeated when symptoms recur.
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PMID:Use of arterial devascularization and cytotoxic drugs in 30 patients with the carcinoid syndrome. 618 1


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