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)

Octreotide is a long-acting cyclic octapeptide with pharmacologic actions mimicking those of the natural hormone somatostatin. It can suppress the secretion of serotonin, as well as the gastroenteropancreatic peptides gastrin, vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP), insulin, glucagon, secretin, motilin, and pancreatic polypeptide. It also suppresses growth hormone and decreases splanchnic blood flow. Octreotide is completely and rapidly absorbed following subcutaneous injection and has an elimination half-life of 1.5 hours. Clinical trials reviewed here show octreotide useful in the treatment of diarrhea associated with VIP secreting tumors, as well as diarrhea and flushing associated with carcinoid syndrome, both conditions for which the drug is approved. Clinical trials involving the use of octreotide in the treatment of acromegaly are also reviewed. Adverse reactions to octreotide are mild to moderate and most commonly involve injection site pain and diarrhea. Drug interactions are apparently related to the drug's pharmacologic effects. Octreotide is given subcutaneously two to three times daily, with daily doses ranging from 50mcg to 1,500mcg per day. Further research appears necessary to clarify dosing issues.
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PMID:Debut of a somatostatin analog: octreotide in review. 255 39

Recent studies have suggested that somatostatin could reduce calcitonin plasma levels (CT) in normal subjects and in medullary thyroid carcinoma (MTC). The aim of this study was to examine the usefulness of the somatostatin analog, sandostatine (SMS 201.995) in MTC with elevated residual CT levels post-thyroidectomy with or without metastases. 18 patients (17-64 years, 12 men and 8 women) with CT greater than 850 pg/ml (N less than 150 pg/ml) and with metastases in 12 cases, were studied. MTC was sporadic in 11 cases, familial in 4 cases and of undefined form in 3. Initial posology was 300 micrograms/d of sandostatin (3 injections/day). It was then increased by 300 micrograms/d every 9 day till a maximum of 1500 micrograms/d. Treatment duration was 37 days in 11 cases and 60 days in 7 cases. Plasma CT and carcinoembryonic antigen levels (CEA) were measured before treatment and at the end of each dosage plateau. Morphologic evaluation of metastases was done at 0, 30, 60 days. 7/18 patients were reevaluated 2 to 8 months after with drawal of sandostatine. Treatment was well tolerated. Flushes improved in 4 out of 5 cases but diarrhea in only 2 out of 9 patients. Sandostatine was without any effect on plasma CEA. Heterogenous responses were observed for plasma CT levels (CT decreases greater than 20% in 8/18 patients when 900 to 1500 micrograms/day were administered). Patients were subdivised into 3 groups according to CEA levels and presence or absence of metastases. Group A (n = 9) had elevated CEA levels (greater than 10 mg/ml) and metastases.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Effects of subcutaneous administration of sandostatine (SMS 201.995) in 18 cases of thyroid medullary cancer]. 263 43

A review is given on the clinical features of carcinoid syndrome including symptomatology, diagnostics, biochemistry and treatment. We have reviewed the literature on current therapy of carcinoid patients with special emphasis on the use of the somatostatin analogue SMS 20-1995. In addition, we present data on the effects of SMS 201-995 on indices of a clinical, biochemical and tumor growth. Diarrhea is abolished or significantly reduced in 75% of patients, flushing improves in 100%, wheezing in 100% with a decrease in airways resistance, and in one patient myopathy has improved. Blood serotonin is notoriously resistant to intervention and urinary 5-HIAA will decrease in 75% of causes but subsequently rebounds in 38%. Tumors, in general, continue to grow, but this may be slowed or in rare cases tumor growth is arrested. In individual instances the tumor may even infarct, leading to spontaneous cure. Tumors secreting PP, ACTH and calcitonin may be particularly resistant to treatment, whereas VIP secreting tumors appear to be sensitive.
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PMID:Clinical features of carcinoid syndrome and the use of somatostatin analogue in its management. 266 49

A 69 year-old male with carcinoid syndrome and undetectable primary tumour, but disseminated liver metastases, was treated with somatostatin analogue octreotide (Sandostatin) and later additionally with recombinant interferon alpha 2 b (r IFN alpha 2 b, Intron A). The carcinoid symptoms (flushing, diarrhoea) were stopped within hours by octreotide. Simultaneously, the urinary 5-hydroxyindolacetic acid (5-HIAA) excretion and serum serotonin levels decreased by more than 50%. In spite of continued treatment with r IFN alpha 2 b a reduction in dosage of octreotide resulted in a rapid recurrence of carcinoid symptoms, suggesting that IFN alpha 2 b had no effect on the carcinoid symptoms in this patient. Since, furthermore, no regression of the tumour mass was observed, treatment with IFN was stopped after 8 months. During 15 months of treatment to date the patient has been kept free of symptoms by octreotide.
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PMID:[Therapy of metastatic carcinoid with the somatostatin analog octreotide and with recombinant interferon alfa 2b]. 276 66

We have reviewed data pertinent to three tumor syndromes that derive from overproduction of three GEP peptide hormones. The clinical syndrome of somatostatin excess remains well defined with diabetes, diarrhea, steatorrhea being predominant features. With the availability of assays and increasing awareness, more cases are being diagnosed in the intestine and these differ somewhat in their presentation with cholecystitis, GI bleeding, or a mass as the cardinal features. An unusual association with MEN II pheochromacytoma and neurofibromatosis is emerging. PPomas remain enigmatic. Although diarrhea is a feature, these tumors are usually silent and present with hypatomegally, abdominal pain, and jaundice because of the large size and malignant nature. Neurotensinomas remain rare and truly difficult to separate from the symptom complex produced by VIP excess. Edema, hypotension, cyanosis and flushing should alert one to the possibility of a neurotensin-secreting tumor.
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PMID:Somatostatinomas, PPomas, neurotensinomas. 282 62

SMS 201-995 (Sandostatin) was studied using low doses (50 to 100 micrograms) administered subcutaneously every 12 hours. A single 50-micrograms dose of SMS 201-995 effectively controlled gastric acid and blood gastrin levels for 12 hours in three patients with benign gastrinomas and was useful in their perioperative management. Higher doses of the agent (500 to 800 micrograms per day) had no effect on metastases in one of two patients with metastatic gastrinoma. In the other patient, one tumor shrank but the other continued to grow after three months of treatment while serum gastrin levels did not change. Cultured metastatic tumor tissue from this patient released different forms of gastrin; growth rates varied, independent of uptake of SMS 201-995, and gastrin release increased. A neonate with nesidioblastosis maintained normal blood glucose levels while receiving SMS 201-995 therapy following a 95 percent pancreatic resection. In two elderly patients with organic hypoglycemia--one with a single benign adenoma and one with multiple adenomatosis--the somatostatin analogue did not prolong the hypoglycemia-free interval. In nine patients with carcinoid syndrome, flushing was uniformly controlled with 50 micrograms of SMS 201-995 administered every eight to 12 hours. One of the nine required exocrine pancreatic replacement. After six months of treatment, three of the nine had no change in tumor size and one had remission of symptoms and stopped treatment. In two patients with vipoma, SMS 201-995 controlled diarrhea and reduced levels of vasoactive intestinal peptide; tumor necrosis occurred in one patient. In a patient with diabetic diarrhea unresponsive to all treatments, SMS 201-995 therapy controlled the diarrhea but did not interfere with control of the diabetes.
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PMID:Somatostatin analogue (SMS 201-995) in the management of gastroenteropancreatic tumors and diarrhea syndromes. 287 47

We describe a 63-yr-old man with disseminated medullary carcinoma of the thyroid and pancreatic nesidioblastosis and microadenosis with pancreatic polypeptide (PP) hypersecretion. His major symptoms were watery diarrhea, flushing, and abdominal bloating; these and the elevated plasma PP levels did not change after resection of the distal two thirds of the pancreas, which contained a 2-cm mass of nesidioblastotic tissue. Postoperatively, a long-acting somatostatin analog, SMS 201-995 (100 micrograms/day), normalized PP secretion acutely and chronically (7 months) and ameliorated his symptoms. The analog had no side-effects and did not alter glucose tolerance, calcitonin hypersecretion, or growth of the medullary carcinoma, but it did inhibit GH secretion. After withdrawal from therapy for 1 month, PP hypersecretion and all symptoms except diarrhea recurred. The coexistence of medullary carcinoma of the thyroid and PP cell nesidioblastosis represents a new variant of the overlap syndromes between multiple endocrine neoplasia types I and II. Patients with medullary carcinoma and unexplained watery diarrhea should have fasting gastroenteropancreatic hormone assays done to screen for a potential gastrointestinal or pancreatic origin for the diarrhea.
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PMID:Medullary carcinoma of the thyroid, pancreatic nesidioblastosis and microadenosis, and pancreatic polypeptide hypersecretion: a new association and clinical and hormonal responses to long-acting somatostatin analog SMS 201-995. 288 96

A patient with carcinoid syndrome on long-term antiserotonin therapy with parachlorophenylalanine, experienced a flushing attack with hypotension during the prophylactic administration of aprotonin prior to the induction of anaesthesia. When she was subsequently prepared with a long-acting somatostatin analogue, octreotide (Sandostatin, Sandoz SMS 201-995), plasma levels of tumour-released hormones were reduced and anaesthesia for resection of hepatic metastases was uneventful. The advantages of an anaesthetic approach based on inhibition of carcinoid tumour activity, rather than antagonism of released hormones, are discussed.
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PMID:Somatostatin, anaesthesia, and the carcinoid syndrome. Peri-operative administration of a somatostatin analogue to suppress carcinoid tumour activity. 288 27

A 47-year-old man with multiple endocrine neoplasia (MEN) type 2a syndrome in whom metaiodobenzylguanidine (MIBG) concentrated in lesions from metastatic medullary carcinoma of the thyroid is reported. A somatostatin analogue (Sandostatin SMS 201-995) alleviated the symptoms of flushing and diarrhea associated with the elevated calcitonin levels but it did not alter either the course of the disease or the MIBG images. A review of the literature is presented of the noncatecholamine secreting tumors associated with MIBG uptake. Similarities between this case and metastatic carcinoid syndrome are discussed.
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PMID:Iodine-131 MIBG uptake in metastatic medullary carcinoma of the thyroid. A patient treated with somatostatin. 289 64

Carcinoid syndrome produces flushing, bronchoconstriction and gastrointestinal hypermotility secondary to serotonin, histamine, bradykinin and prostaglandin release. A variety of drugs, foods and anaesthetic agents may provoke this syndrome. Under anaesthesia, the flushing produced may be associated with acute hypotension and cardiovascular collapse; this phenomenon is called a carcinoid crisis. Recently, somatostatin analogue has been used successfully to treat intraoperative carcinoid crisis. In this report, we present a 66-year-old lady with carcinoid syndrome who was pre-treated with 50 micrograms somatostatin analogue IV and IM prior to surgical manipulation. The anaesthetic course was relatively uneventful and the patient did well postoperatively.
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PMID:Pre-treatment with somatostatin in the anaesthetic management of a patient with carcinoid syndrome. 290 85


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