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Query: UMLS:C0027627 (
metastases
)
103,950
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Two patients with pancreatic cholera and islet-cell carcinoma were treated with intra-arterial streptozotocin. Before therapy, they had stool volumes from 2 to 8 liters per day and required 200 to 800 mEq per day of supplemental potassium. After three to five doses of streptozotocin (1.5 per square meter), both stool volume and number and size of hepatic
metastases
decreased markedly. One patient has had normally formed stools for 12 months; the other had a 90 per cent reduction in stool volume for 13 months with additional therapy. Both patients' serum potassium returned to normal without need for supplementation. Jejunal adenylate cyclase activity was normal in both, and plasma
vasoactive intestinal peptide
was detectable in only one. After chemotherapy, these findings showed no consistent change. Pharmacologic studies suggest that arterial administration increased either tumor or hepatic extraction (or both) of streptozotocin by two times and decreased renal exposure to this nephrotoxic drug by one third.
...
PMID:Pancreatic cholera: benefical effects of treatment with streptozotocin. 16 65
Results of light and electron-microscopic studies of primary pancreatic tumor and of metastasis in a new case of Pancreatic Cholera (P.C.) are reported. The primary tumor but not the
metastases
, contained unusual, large cystic glandular formations, lined both by pancreatic-duct- and small-intestine-like epithelia and closely connected with the endocrine proliferation. A part from a few D-cells, the endocrine tumoral cells could not be identified by histochemical stainings. Their ultrastructural pattern, with small secretory granules (diameter less than 300 nm) and numerous cytoplasmic bunches of filaments, was very similar to that of gastric and duodenal D1-cells. Normal duodenal D1-cells have been said to produce gastric inhibitory peptide, a substance structurally and biologically similar to the
vasoactive intestinal peptide
actually secreted by the tumor. The normal histological appearance of gastric, gallbladder, jejunal, ileal, right and left colonic mucosae is consistent with the responsibility of the tumoral secretion in the impairment of gut functions in P.C.
...
PMID:Pancreatic cholera (W.D.H.A. syndrome). Histochemical and ultrastructural studies. 17 Jul 29
Determination of plasma levels of vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP) has been used for screening patients with chronic diarrhea to identify potential neuroendocrine tumors. This 6-year blinded study from 1981 to 1986 examines the causes of elevated VIP levels in patients. In healthy volunteers ( n = 144), VIP concentrations ranged from 14 to 76 pg/mL (mean +/- SE, 28 +/- 12), whereas in chronic renal failure, 4 of 34 patients or 12% [serum creatinine 4.5 - 9.0 mg/dL (397-795 mumols/L)] had an elevation to greater than 100 pg/mL. No patient with idiopathic hepatic cirrhosis (n = 12) had elevation of serum concentration of this peptide. Among 588 consecutive unselected patients undergoing evaluation for chronic diarrhea (n = 362; 62%) or possible neuroendocrine tumor (n = 214; 36%), 23 patients (3.9%) had concentrations greater than 76 pg/mL. In this group, 5 patients had functioning (VIP, 160-5975 pg/mL) and 5 had nonfunctioning (VIP, 80-120 pg/mL) pancreatic islet cell carcinomas: all 10 patients had hepatic
metastases
. Other known cases of elevated levels of VIP, ranging from 80 to 340 pg/mL, included other neurogenic tumors (n = 3), small- bowel resection (n = 2), inflammatory bowel disease (n = 2), chronic renal failure (n = 1), and prolonged fasting (n = 1). Patients with diarrhea in which VIP-secreting tumors were identified had plasma
vasoactive intestinal peptide
concentrations greater than 140 pg/mL. In patients with chronic diarrhea, determination of plasma
vasoactive intestinal peptide
levels did identify tumors secreting this peptide, but the results from this referral institution did not show identification of these tumors early in their clinical course.
...
PMID:Plasma vasoactive intestinal polypeptide concentration determination in patients with diarrhea. 198 54
Concentrations of seven neuropeptides have been determined in 69 human neurological tumours. The majority of tumours were intrinsic to the central nervous system, being astrocytomas. In general, within the the better differentiated tumours (Grade I/II astrocytomas) higher concentrations of five neuropeptides (neuropeptide Y, somatostatin, substance P,
vasoactive intestinal peptide
and cholecystokinin) were measured in comparison to the poorly differentiated tumours. Of the metastatic tumours, five were derived from oat cell carcinoma of the bronchus. Very high concentrations of bombesin were identified in these
metastases
.
...
PMID:Neuropeptides in neurological tumours. 241 12
Four plexosarcomas (gastrointestinal autonomic nerve tumors) characterized by light microscopic, immunocytochemical, and ultrastructural examination, including immunoelectron microscopy in one case, are described. The four neoplasms occurred in the small intestine (duodenum, two; jejunum, one; and ileum, one) and they had an aggressive course with either local or distant
metastases
. The light-microscopic patterns varied from epithelioid and organoid to spindle cells, mimicking endocrine and sarcomatous neoplasms. Ultrastructurally, these tumors exhibited interdigitating cytoplasmic processes that contained scattered aggregates of membrane-bound granules varying in size from 100 to 300 nm intermixed with empty vesicles and numerous diffusely distributed intermediate filaments. Basal lamina covering cell surfaces, attachment plaques, and myofilaments, as expected in smooth-muscle tumors, were not identified, and diffusely distributed membrane-bound granules, as seen in paragangliomas and carcinoid tumors, were also absent. By immunocytochemistry, the tumors were intensely positive for vimentin and neuron-specific enolase and focally positive for neurofilaments and synaptophysin. In addition, three tumors were S100 protein positive and one stained for
vasoactive intestinal peptide
. Similar positive immunocytochemical reactions were identified in normal enteric plexus. It is essential to recognize plexosarcomas, which are invariably accompanied by aggressive clinical behavior, in spite of a seemingly benign, mitotically inactive light-microscopic appearance in most instances. Ultrastructural examination can readily separate plexosarcomas from paragangliomas and other sarcomatous and endocrine neoplasms.
...
PMID:Gastrointestinal autonomic nerve tumors. 'Plexosarcomas'. 275 84
Fourteen hormone-producing gastrointestinal tract tumors were tested for their content of somatostatin (SRIH) receptors, using receptor autoradiography and in vitro binding assay with tumor homogenates. All four gastrinomas tested had high levels of SRIH receptors, as did two of five insulinomas and four of five
vasoactive intestinal peptide
-producing tumors. Receptor visualization was obtained with two different radioligands, either a SRIH-28 analog, [125I]-[Leu8,D-Trp22,Tyr25]SRIH-28, or a SRIH octapeptide, the [125I]Tyr3 derivative of SMS 201-995 [H-DPhe-Cys-Phe-DTrp-Lys-Thr-Cys-Thr(ol)], [125I]204-090. In both cases receptors were localized over the tumor cell area only. Biochemical and pharmacological analyses of one insulinoma and two vipomas revealed saturable, high affinity binding sites with pharmacological specificity for SRIH. However, differences in receptor affinity of selected SRIH analogs, in particular SRIH-28 and SRIH octapeptides, were found between the insulinomas and the two other tumor types, vipoma and gastrinoma. The presence of SRIH receptors on various hormone-producing gastrointestinal tumors suggests that at least part of the beneficial effects of chronic therapy with SRIH analogs may be mediated through such membrane-bound receptors located on the tumor itself. SRIH receptor measurement may be of prognostic value in assessment of the therapeutic efficacy of SRIH analogs. They may also be of diagnostic value, if used as in vivo markers for the localization of small hormone-producing gastrointestinal tumors or their
metastases
.
...
PMID:Hormone-producing gastrointestinal tumors contain a high density of somatostatin receptors. 282 49
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.
...
PMID:Somatostatin analogue (SMS 201-995) in the management of gastroenteropancreatic tumors and diarrhea syndromes. 287 47
Two cases of glucagonoma, one benign and the other malignant, was presented. Benign glucagonoma in a 29-year-old man with multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1 was composed largely of tumor cells with secretory granules ranging from 139 to 417 nm in diameter identical to A cell granules. There were a few tumor cells which contained no A cell granules but smaller granules of approximately 166 nm diameter similar to those of pancreatic polypeptide containing cells. Radioimmunoassay of the tumor extract showed 319 micrograms/g wet weight of glucagon and 0.72 microgram/g wet weight of pancreatic polypeptide. Malignant glucagonoma in a 34-year-old man was a massive tumor of 7 X 6 X 5 cm replacing the tail and body of the pancreas with multiple
metastases
. The tumor contained 0.2 microgram/g wet weight of glucagon and 0.065 microgram/g wet weight of
vasoactive intestinal peptide
. The electron microscopic examination revealed that the tumor cells had variable numbers of atypical secretory granules measuring 110 to 200 nm in diameter different from A cell granules. An analysis of plasma glucagon by the gel filtration technique showed the heterogeneity of glucagon molecules indicating the presence of large glucagon. Atypical secretory granules in malignant glucagonoma were considered to represent immature granules containing the precursor or intermediate of glucagon.
...
PMID:Secretory granules in benign and malignant glucagonomas of the pancreas. 632 64
Twenty-five strictly defined bronchopulmonary carcinoids were studied by light microscopic immunohistochemistry by the peroxidase technique for NSE (neuron-specific enolase), serotonin, and a broad spectrum of neuropeptides. Eighteen cases were also studied by electron microscopy. Twenty-three of the twenty-five cases showed immunostaining for NSE; 24 cases displayed immunostaining for at least two of the hormones tested for; the single case that failed to show hormonal immuno-reactivity was however positive for NSE and had granules by electron microscopy. Serotonin was the most frequently demonstrated hormone followed by bombesin,
vasoactive intestinal peptide
, gastrin, leu-enkephalin , alpha-melanocyte stimulating hormone, somatostatin, substance P, and calcitonin. In several cases, adjacent-step sections stained for different hormones strongly indicated immunoreactivity for more than one hormone in single neoplastic cells. By electron microscopy, all 18 cases studied showed generally abundant neurosecretory granules, which, however, displayed considerable heterogeneity in their size, shape, and density. Twelve of these eighteen cases displayed evidence of squamous differentiation and 10 showed characteristic exocrine lumina. The capability of single neuroendocrine tumors and single neuroendocrine tumor cells to produce more than one immunoreactive hormone is hereby amply confirmed; these broad capabilities are certainly reflected in the heterogeneous granule populations seen by electron microscopy. The synchronous presence of squamous and exocrine features in broncho-pulmonary carcinoids indicates that they too are capable of multidirectional differentiation, which should not detract from their being regarded basically as well-differentiated neuroendocrine neoplasms. The clinical significance of strictly defining bronchial carcinoids is underscored by the fact that of 25 cases followed for 2-13 years, only one developed
metastases
9 years postoperatively.
...
PMID:Immunohistochemical and ultrastructural analysis of bronchopulmonary neuroendocrine neoplasms. I. Carcinoids. 637 57
The surgical management of pancreatic islet cell carcinomas poses a complicated set of questions resulting from their rare occurrence and the difficulty in establishing a diagnosis in early cases or, conversely, the problems inherent in dealing with
metastatic disease
. However, because their biologic behavior is rather indolent, a real opportunity exists not only for cure but also for meaningful palliation. These goals apply both to the tumor itself and the effects of the hormones they may secrete. The challenge facing the multidisciplinary management team in general, and the surgeon specifically, is to achieve the optimal combination of surgical resection and other treatment options. While the precept of aggressive excision applies to most islet cell carcinomas, it is not universally applicable. In contrast to other islet cell tumors, insulinomas are overwhelmingly benign, and are well treated by enucleation or limited pancreatic resection. Although based on relatively few cases, cytoreductive surgery seems beneficial for malignant insulinomas. Advances that have occurred over the past decade in Zollinger-Ellison syndrome have markedly altered surgical management. Medication which reliably prevents ulcer formation has permitted the surgical perspective to be redirected from end organ ablation to curative tumor excision. Multicentricity and
metastases
, however, limit the extent to which cure can actually be achieved. Patients with
vasoactive intestinal peptide
-producing tumors and glucagonomas are very rare, and when possible, should undergo tumor resection to correct the severe hormonally caused metabolic derangements. Increasingly recognized are islet cell carcinomas that do not produce clinical syndromes. They may be confused with ductal carcinomas, but when resected, lead to distinctly superior survival rates among patients.
...
PMID:Surgical management of malignant islet cell tumors. 839 50
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