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)

APUDomas are rare tumours originating from a variety of endocrine cells localized in different organs. Acute complications from APUDomas usually result from the increased biosynthesis and release of bioactive amines or polypeptide hormones by the tumour. Less frequently, bleeding or compression by the tumour can occur requiring emergency surgery. Increased gastrin production by gastrinomas is the cause of ZES (peptic ulceration and diarrhoea) by gastrin effects on gastric acid secretion. Volume depletion, hypokalaemia, severe bleeding, duodenal perforation, oesophageal stricture and pyloric stenosis are the most dramatic complications. Treatment of these complications and their prevention has been facilitated by the availability of antagonists to H2 receptors and H(+)-K+ proton pump. These medications should control acid output in every patient with ZES. Frequent manifestations of carcinoid tumours, VIPomas and medullary thyroid carcinomas are flushing and diarrhoea. Octreotide, a long-acting somatostatin analogue, has markedly changed the management of these patients, their symptoms decreasing in severity or disappearing in most cases. Octreotide has also been used with success in the prevention and treatment of the carcinoid crisis, a dreaded complication of carcinoid tumours. A better understanding of the pathophysiology of APUDomas has enabled new treatment designs which have considerably ameliorated the quality of life of patients affected by these tumours; efforts must be continued to affect their life expectancy.
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PMID:APUDomas: acute complications and their medical management. 131 Aug 47

To evaluate the frequency of associated endocrine disorders, 26 patients with the Zollinger-Ellison syndrome were restudied in a uniform screening programme. The examinations were directed primarily against disorders in the pituitary, parathyroid, thyroid, adrenal cortex, and endocrine pancreas. Fourteen endocrine disorders were found in 10 patients (38%). Ten of these were newly diagnosed. Five patients had hyperparathyroidism, and in two of these a pituitary adenoma was also suspected. Two had pituitary adenomas, one was suspected of having a pituitary adenoma and one of having adrenocortical hypofunction, and one showed multiple hormone production with hypoglycaemia and flushing. It is concluded that most cases of associated endocrinopathies are not diagnosed until specifically looked for. In the Danish population of patients with the Zollinger-Ellison syndrome the prevalence is about 38%.
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PMID:Frequency of endocrine disorders in patients with the Zollinger-Ellison syndrome. 388 54

Among endocrine tumors arising in the intestinal tract, midgut argentaffin EC cell carcinoids, duodenal gastrin cell tumors and rectal trabecular L cell carcinoids, in order of decreasing frequency, are those better represented. Together they account for more than 80% of such tumors. Duodenal somatostatin cell tumors, gangliocytic paragangliomas and poorly differentiated neuroendocrine carcinomas, are also well defined tumor entities. The carcinoid syndrome with intermittent flushing, hypotension and diarrhea, and the Zollinger-Ellison syndrome with severe peptic ulcer disease, are the only hyperfunctional syndromes consistently found in association with these tumors. The carcinoid syndrome arises in about 10% of intestinal carcinoids, usually in their advanced metastatic stage. The Zollinger-Ellison syndrome occurs in association with about 40% of gastrin cell tumors, including small intramural growths. Tumor prognosis depends on mode and site of presentation, histology, cell type(s), size, level of invasion, metastases (especially distant metastases) and associated clinical syndrome or background disease.
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PMID:Endocrine tumors of the small and large intestine. 747 53

Among endocrine tumors occurring in the gastrointestinal tract, midgut argentaffin EC cell carcinoids, gastric argyrophil ECL cell carcinoids, duodenal gastrin cell tumors, and rectal trabecular L cell carcinoids (in order of decreasing frequency) are those occurring more frequently. Together, they account for more than 80% of such tumors. Duodenal somatostatin cell tumors, gangliocytic paragangliomas, and differentiated neuroendocrine carcinomas are also well-defined tumor entities. The carcinoid syndrome, either classical, with intermittent flushing, hypotension, and diarrhea, or atypical, with persistent histamine-type red flushing, bronchospasm, and no diarrhea, and Zollinger-Ellison syndrome, with severe peptide ulcer disease, are the only hyperfunctional syndromes consistently found in association with these tumors. The carcinoid syndrome occurs in about 10% of gastrointestinal carcinoids, usually in their advanced, metastatic stage. The Zollinger-Ellison syndrome occurs in association with about 40% of intestinal gastrin cell tumors, including small intramural growths. Tumor prognosis depends on the mode and site of presentation, histology, cell type(s), size, level of invasion, metastases (especially distant metastases), and associated clinical syndrome or background disease. Hormones, trophic factors, inherited genetic traits, somatic mutations, and some chronic inflammatory processes are pathogenetically important in a large proportion of cases.
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PMID:The pathology of the gastrointestinal endocrine system. 812 73

The authors report their experience with octreotide in 20 patients (median age 57 years, 10 M, 10 F) from 1984 to 1991; 16 had metastatic APUDoma: 1 PPoma with VIPoma, 1 glucagonoma, 5 gastrinoma including 1 associated to PP-oma, 9 mid-gut carcinoid; 3 patients had multiple-endocrine neoplasia type I (MEN-I) with Zollinger-Ellison syndrome (ZES) and 1 patient a non-metastatic VIPoma. Octreotide (200-750 micrograms/day) was administered bid or tid with regular laboratory controls and morphological assessment. There was a striking improvement of symptoms, particularly in the carcinoid group (reduction of flushing in all patients and of diarrhoea in 3/5), in the patient with gastrinoma + acromegaly (regression of congestive heart failure) and in the patient with non-metastatic VIPoma. The hormonal markers were markedly reduced, particularly gastrin, PP (except in the patient with PPoma + VIPoma), VIP, GH and Somatomedin-C and urinary 5HIAA in 4/9 patients with carcinoid. There was only one partial regression of metastases (gastrinoma) and 4 apparent stabilizations of tumour growth, in the 16 metastatic cases. Among them, 4 patients died: 1 glucagonoma, 1 PPoma + VIPoma, 2 mid-gut carcinoids after a treatment of 5, 16, 30, 36 months, respectively. The patient with acromegaly + ZES died after 6 years of treatment at age 81. A patient with prolactinoma, resected insulinoma, hyperparathyroidism and ZES was not improved by a short course of octreotide (hypoglycemia); he died later of recurrent insulinoma. In conclusion, octreotide is a useful drug to control most of the symptoms related to gut endocrine tumours; it may inhibit tumour growth.
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PMID:Use of octreotide in the treatment of digestive neuroendocrine tumours. Seven year experience in 20 cases including 9 cases of metastatic midgut carcinoid and 5 cases of metastatic gastrinoma. 826 71

Gastroenteropancreatic (GEP) neoplasms originate from any of the various cell types belonging to the neuroendocrine system. A general characteristic of GEP endocrine tumours is that the vast majority produce and secrete a multitude of peptide hormones and amines. Many patients with malignant metastasising tumours present clinical symptoms related to hormone hyperproduction. These include the so-called carcinoid syndrome, characterised by flushing, diarrhoea, wheezing and right heart disease, which is predominantly associated with the serotonin- and tachykinins-producing carcinoids of the midgut. Several types of syndrome associated with GEP endocrine tumors are caused by overproduction of a specific hormone. For instance, the well-known Zollinger-Ellison syndrome is gastrin-mediated. The so-called 'insulinoma syndrome' depends on excessive production of insulin and proinsulin, resulting in hypoglycemia. The 'glucagonoma syndrome' is characterised by necrolytic migratory erythema, diabetes and diarrhoea. The Verner-Morrison syndrome, which is brought about by high circulating levels of vasointestinal peptide (VIP). produces severe secretory diarrhoea. Finally the 'somatostatinoma syndrome' involves gallbladder dysfunction and gallstones, diarrhoea with or without steatorrhea, and impaired glucose tolerance. The biochemical diagnosis of endocrine digestive tumors is based on general and specific markers. The best general markers are chromogranin A (CgA) and pancreatic polypeptide (PP). Specific markers for endocrine tumors include insulin, gastrin, glucagon, vaso intestinal polypeptide (VIP), somatostatin and the primary cathabolic product of serotonin, 5-hydroxyndoleacetic acid (5-HIAA). Localisation procedures commonly applied, in the diagnosis of endocrine tumours include ultrasound (US), computed tomography (CT) and somatostatin receptor scintigraphy (SRS).
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PMID:Epidemiology, clinical features and diagnosis of gastroenteropancreatic endocrine tumours. 1176 60

Digestive neuro-endocrine tumours have a broad and initially misleading clinical spectrum. Tumours from the duodenopancreatic area should be distinguished from digestive carcinoid tumours. In the first group, insulinomas, gastrinomas, and non-functioning tumours are the most frequent. Insulinoma is responsible for hypoglycaemic symptoms (coma, confusion, seizure, psychiatric disorders) associated with adrenergic response (sweat, tachycardia, palpitations). Gastrinoma is responsible for the Zollinger-Ellison syndrome, which associates peptic ulcers in the oesophagus, stomach, and duodenum without Helicobacter pylori infection, and chronic volumogenic diarrhoea. Non-functioning tumours are recognised fortuitously or at a late stage, when large tumour mass contrasts with often unaltered general condition. Carcinoid tumours are mainly located in the appendix, the rectum, and the small bowel. In the 2 first conditions, the diagnosis is most often made on a resection specimen after uneventful appendectomy or polypectomy; in the latter, the carcinoid syndrome is frequent, combining cutaneous flushing, motor diarrhoea, tricuspid valve insufficiency and bronchospasm.
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PMID:[Clinical spectrum of digestive neuroendocrine tumors]. 1192 15

Endocrine tumors (ET) of the digestive tract (formerly called neuroendocrine tumors) are rare. They are classified into two principal types: gastrointestinal ET's (formerly called carcinoid tumors) which are the most common, and pancreaticoduodenal ET's. Functioning ET's secrete polypeptide hormones which cause characteristic hormonal syndromes. The management of ET is multidisciplinary. Poorly-differentiated ET's have a poor prognosis and are treated by chemotherapy. Surgical excision is the only curative treatment of well-differentiated ET's. The surgical goals are to: 1. prolong survival by resecting the primary tumor and any nodal or hepatic metastases, 2. control the symptoms related to hormonal secretion, 3. prevent or treat local complications. The most common sites of gastrointestinal ET's ( carcinoids) are the appendix and the rectum; these are often small (<1 cm), benign, and discovered fortuitously at the time of appendectomy or colonoscopic removal. Ileal ET's, even if small, are malignant, frequently multiple, and complicated in 30-50% of cases by bowel obstruction, mesenteric invasion, or bleeding. The carcinoid syndrome (consisting of abdominal pain, flushing, diarrhea, hypertension, bronchospasm, and right sided cardiac vegetations) is caused by the hypersecretion of serotonin into the systemic circulation; it occurs in 10% of cases and is usually associated with hepatic metastases. More than half of the cases of pancreatic ET are non-functional. They are usually malignant and of advanced stage at diagnosis presenting as a palpable or obstructing mass or as liver metastases. Insulinoma and gastrinoma (cause of the Zollinger-Ellison syndrome) are the most common functional ET's. 80% are sporadic; in these cases, tumor size, location, and malignant potential determine the type of resection which may vary from a simple enucleation to a formal pancreatectomy. In 10-20% of cases, pancreaticoduodenal ET presents in the setting of multiple endocrine neoplasia (NEM type I), an autosomal-dominant genetic disease with multifocal endocrine involvement of the pituitary, parathyroid, pancreas, and adrenal glands. For insulinoma with NEM-I, enucleation of lesions in the pancreatic head plus a caudal pancreatectomy is the most appropriate procedure. For gastrinoma with NEM-I, the benefit of surgical resection for tumors less than 2-3 cm in size is not clear. The lesions are frequently small, multiple, and widespread and recurrence is frequent after excision. The long-term prognosis is nevertheless fairly good. But the eventual development of liver metastases which are the most common cause of mortality still argues for an aggressive surgical approach in the early stages of the disease.
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PMID:[Surgical treatment of gastric, enteric, and pancreatic endocrine tumors Part 1. Treatment of primary endocrine tumors]. 1614 76