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Query: UMLS:C0027627 (
metastases
)
103,950
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Ultrasonographic imaging was performed on 49 patients who had pancreatic islet cell tumors, including examples of all six known tumor varieties. In beta cell insulinomas, ultrasonography was of little value for tumor visualization, because these tumors tend to be small and the patients frequently are obese. On the other hand, ultrasonography was very effective for evaluating the nonbeta cell tumors, detecting both primary pancreatic neoplasms and hepatic
metastases
in patients with glucagonomas, somatostatinoma, non-functioning tumors, and the WDHA syndrome. In detection of the Zollinger-Ellison syndrome, ultrasonography compares favorably with previously reported
gastrinoma
detection by angiography and CT scanning.
...
PMID:Ultrasonic investigation of pancreatic islet cell tumors. 630 3
From the non-B-cell tumors of the pancreas the
gastrinoma
(Zollinger-Ellison-syndrome) is the best known. The glucagonoma and the vipoma are less known and less common. The diagnosis of these syndroms, produced by overproduction of hormones, is a clinical one. The radiodiagnost has to localize the primary tumor and to exclude
metastases
. The x-ray findings of the glucagonoma in 3 patients and of the vipoma in 1 patient are described.
...
PMID:[Radiodiagnosis of glucagonoma and vipoma, 2 rare endocrine pancreatic tumors]. 633 Aug 2
A method for measurement of gastrin in human antral mucosa or in extragastric tissue has been developed and validated. Tissue gastrin was extracted by boiling followed by homogenization at neutral pH. Extractable gastrin immunoreactivity was measured by radioimmunoassay using an antiserum with equal affinity towards G-17 I, G-17 II, G-34 I and G-34 II molecular forms. Almost all extractable gastrin immunoreactivity was recovered after a single extraction and no significant interference by other peptides and/or substances present in tissue was found. The mean gastrin concentration in antral mucosa of healthy subjects was similar to that observed in duodenal ulcer patients, while patients with type A chronic atrophic gastritis or with antral gastrin cell hyperplasia had mean values significantly higher. Gastrin concentration in all specimens from
gastrinoma
or its
metastases
was above the upper limit of the range of control tissue. Measurement of tissue gastrin seems to be a valuable tool in the diagnosis of antral gastrin cell hyperplasia and Zollinger-Ellison syndrome.
...
PMID:Measurement of immunoreactive gastrin in tissue. 650 40
In a patient with Zollinger-Ellison syndrome, control of the peptic ulcer diathesis was attempted by excision of a small duodenal
gastrinoma
and removal of three lymph nodes containing
metastases
. The patient has been asymptomatic for 2.5 years with basal achlorhydria, a normal serum gastrin level and a negative gastrin response to secretin. Our experience with this patient emphasizes the fact that the presence of
metastatic disease
does not preclude the possibility of long-term control of hypergastrinemia by resection of the tumor. Attempts to cure the Zollinger-Ellison syndrome by tumor resection alone, however, should only be made in patients whose hypersecretion is adequately controlled by antisecretory drugs.
...
PMID:Control of the Zollinger-Ellison syndrome by excision of primary and metastatic tumor. 670 15
Laparotomy failed to show an obvious primary lesion in two patients with the Zollinger-Ellison syndrome (ZES), one of whom had metastatic
gastrinoma
in a solitary lymph node which was removed. Both patients underwent a truncal vagotomy and pyloroplasty. Postoperative acid studies have shown a marked and sustained diminution in acid hypersecretion which was particularly striking in the patient with a solitary metastatic lymph node. The patient without a detectable lesion is now well-controlled on half the dose of cimetidine required pre-operatively and the other no longer requires therapy. We believe that patients in whom pre-operative investigations have shown no evidence of extensive
metastases
should undergo laparotomy in the hope of finding a solitary primary or isolated metastatic lesions unassociated with an obvious primary in the pancreas. Available evidence suggests that simple removal of such lesions offers the patient an excellent chance of long-term remission. However, if no such lesion is discovered, vagotomy may be the logical procedure to assist in the subsequent pharmacological control of the acid hypersecretory state.
...
PMID:Conservative surgery in the Zollinger-Ellison syndrome. 672 75
We determined the relative concentrations of gastrin molecular species in serum samples from 21 patients with Zollinger-Ellison syndrome with localized
gastrinoma
(n = 11) or
gastrinoma
with hepatic
metastases
(n = 10). Gastrin molecular species were separated by gel-filtration chromatography and quantitated by radioimmunoassay with a gastrin antiserum produced in our laboratory. The percentage gastrin-17 of the total gastrin in the two groups differed significantly (nonparametric Wilcoxon rank test; p less than 0.01). Patients with the Zollinger-Ellison syndrome with apparently localized
gastrinoma
had a lower percentage of G- 17 (7.6%, SEM 1.6%) than did patients with
gastrinoma
with hepatic
metastases
(31.1%, SEM 6.1%). This procedure may be useful in the early classification of tumors in patients with Zollinger-Ellison syndrome.
...
PMID:Serum gastrins in Zollinger-Ellison syndrome: identification of localized disease. 737 8
Prior to total gastrectomy, serum levels of gastrin and human chorionic gonadotropin (HCG) and its alpha- and beta-subunits (alpha-HCG and beta-HCG) were determined by radioimmunoassays in 40 patients with the Zollinger-Ellison syndrome. Basal serum gastrin levels greater than 1,500 pg/mL were found only in patients with
metastases
to lymph nodes or liver, while levels greater than 8,000 indicated massive liver replacement by tumor. Gastrin levels less than 1,500 pg/mL had no correlation with malignant behavior. Neither the calcium-infusion nor secretin-injection test was useful in identifying tumors as benign or malignant. Basal serum levels of alpha-HCG were elevated (> 7 ng/mL) in four of 20 patients with metastatic
gastrinoma
and were normal in all 16 patients with benign disease. There was a significant correlation between basal gastrin and alpha-HCG levels in patients with malignant
gastrinoma
but not for those with benign tumors. The results suggest that serum gastrin and alpha-HCG levels can be useful in assessing the biologic behavior of gastrinomas and in planning appropriate surgical and nonsurgical treatment.
...
PMID:Serum gastrin and human chorionic gonadotropin in the Zollinger-Ellison syndrome. 741 55
Requisites for preoperative and intraoperative tumor localization with [111In]diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid-D-[Phe1]-octreotide scanning were explored in 23 patients with endocrine tumors (15 carcinoids, 4 insulinomas, and single cases of
gastrinoma
, medullary thyroid carcinoma, aldosteronoma, and paraganglioma). The patients were subjected to Octreoscan single photon emission computed tomographic examination prior to surgery and well counter investigation of nuclide uptake in tumors and normal tissues sampled at surgery. Somatostatin receptor-positive tumors demonstrated efficient nuclide accumulation with mean tumor:blood radioactivity ratios of 180-370 (for carcinoids and insulinoma), compared with tissue:blood ratios of 302 for spleen, 42 for liver, and < 10-15 in other normal tissues (pancreas, small intestine, and mesenteric fat). Inefficient preoperative visualization of lesions was related to inconspicuous size, as for primary intestinal carcinoids, tiny liver metastases, and a single small insulinoma. High background activity, pronounced tumor fibrosis, and meager accumulation of tracer also interfered with visualization. Tumor deposits in organs with low background activity (such as carcinoid mesenteric
metastases
and endocrine pancreatic tumors) were generally most readily detected. Intraoperative investigations with hand-held gamma detector probes were disturbed by obvious high background activity. These investigations revealed two preoperatively unrecognized primary intestinal carcinoids, which, however, were both palpable during surgery. These studies, therefore, had little impact on the surgical strategy.
...
PMID:Human biodistribution of [111In]diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid-(DTPA)-D-[Phe1]-octreotide and peroperative detection of endocrine tumors. 749 48
The surgical treatment of patients with the Zollinger-Ellison syndrome has undergone a dramatic evolution since the syndrome was originally described. It is now recognized that an aggressive surgical approach is mandatory because of the malignant potential of gastrinomas in both the sporadic and the familial forms of the syndrome. Although initially regarded as an incurable neoplasm, it is now known that complete surgical resection of gastrinomas can result in eugastrinemia even in the presence of lymph node
metastases
. It is now recognized that extrapancreatic gastrinomas are more common than pancreatic gastrinomas, and the most common location for an extrapancreatic
gastrinoma
is the duodenal wall. Major improvements in preoperative imaging and intraoperative localization techniques combined with an increased awareness of the anatomic distribution of gastrinomas have markedly increased the surgeon's ability to care for and cure patients with the Zollinger-Ellison syndrome.
...
PMID:The place for curative surgical procedures in the treatment of sporadic and familial Zollinger-Ellison syndrome. 758 13
Zollinger-Ellison syndrome (ZES) is caused by gastrin-secreting tumors called gastrinomas. Patients commonly present with peptic ulcer disease and may have recurrent, multiple, and atypically located ulcers, e.g. in the jejunum. Alternatively, severe diarrhea may be the only presenting symptom. Patients with multiple endocrine neoplasia Type I (MEN-I) and ZES become symptomatic at an earlier age than patients with sporadic ZES. Patients with ZES have elevated fasting serum gastrin concentrations (> 100 pg/ml) and basal gastric acid hypersecretion (> 15 mEq/h). The secretin stimulation test is the best test to distinguish ZES from other conditions resulting in elevated gastrin levels. Gastric acid hypersecretion can be controlled in virtually all patients with H2-receptor antagonists or omeprazole, thus rendering total gastrectomy unnecessary. Computed tomography (CT), magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), radionuclide octreotide scanning, endoscopic ultrasound, and the selective arterial secretin injection test are the recommended imaging studies for localization of
gastrinoma
; nevertheless, 50% of gastrinomas are not evident on preoperative imaging studies. All patients with sporadic
gastrinoma
who do not have unresectable
metastatic disease
should undergo exploratory laparotomy for potential curative resection. With increased awareness of duodenal tumors,
gastrinoma
can be found in 80-90% of patients. Surgery may be the most effective treatment for metastatic
gastrinoma
if most or all of the tumor can be resected. The management of patients with MEN-I and ZES remains controversial. Some clinicians advocate an aggressive surgical approach, whereas others have had little success in rendering patients eugastrinemic.
...
PMID:Management of patients with Zollinger-Ellison syndrome. 759 74
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