Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0038358 (gastric ulcer)
5,179 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Administration of 2-DG accompanied by simultaneous neutralization of gastric contents with sodium bicarbonate resulted in a rise in serum gastrin in 4 patients without gastric disease, 4 with duodenal ulcer and 4 with gastric ulcer. The rise in gastrin equals that observed on stimulation with meat extract. Patients with gastric ulcers display a low PAO and a small rise in gastrin compared with normals and patients with duodenal ulcers. This finding correlates well with the chronic atrophic changes of the antral mucosa in patients with gastric ulcer.
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PMID:[Behavior of serum gastrin under vagus stimulation with 2-deoxy-D-glucose with special reference to acid secretion and the mucosal histology]. 125 25

The postoperative results of pylorus-preserving gastrectomy (PPG) for gastric ulcer performed in 134 patients during the past 25 years (mean postoperative period, 16.6 years) were studied. The incidence of postoperative complications was low. Dumping syndrome occurred in only 4.4% and 0% of cases as assessed by questionnaire and interview, respectively. Four (5.4%) of 74 patients available for this study had ulcer recurrence. In one of these four patients concurrent gastroduodenal ulcer was suspected from preoperative gastric analysis. The site of recurrence was found in all cases to be the remnant antral gland area along the greater curvature between the proper gastric gland area and the duodenum. Basal and maximal acid outputs at the time of relapse were significantly higher in patients with recurrence than in patients without recurrence. The fasting and postprandial serum gastrin levels were high in one patient with recurrence, whose antrum was preserved as long as 3 cm proximal to the pyloric ring; this was longer than that described in our original method of PPG. In two other recurrent cases the serum gastrin levels were not different from those in nonrecurrent cases. Immunohistochemical examination of the residual antrum showed no increase in the G-cell density in patients either with or without recurrence. These results suggest that the long-term quality of life of patients treated with PPG remains favorable. Recurrence rate can be further reduced if PPG is strictly indicated for gastric ulcer only and carried out by meticulous surgical techniques. In the pathogenesis of the ulcer recurrence the role of gastrin release from the residual antral mucosa seems to be limited.
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PMID:Long-term results of pylorus-preserving gastrectomy for gastric ulcer. 130 2

Fasting serum gastrin values were measured by radioimmunoassay in 53 children with peptic ulcer disease. The mean fasting serum gastrin levels for children with chronic duodenal ulcer, acute gastric ulcer, acute duodenal ulcer who were younger than two years old and acute duodenal ulcer who were older than two years old were: 46.2 +/- 25.7 pg/mL, 46.9 +/- 43.5 pg/mL, 47.9 +/- 12.0 pg/mL and 37.5 +/- 17.8 pg/mL, respectively. Children with peptic ulcer disease did not have elevated fasting serum gastrin levels when compared with age-matched controls. We conclude that a fasting serum gastrin value cannot be used as a screening test for peptic ulcer disease in children, except for Zollinger-Ellison syndrome.
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PMID:Serum gastrin levels in children with peptic ulcer disease. 135 89

Ninety patients suffering from peptic ulcer and 25 healthy subjects were examined for the content of gastrin, bombesin and somatostatin in blood and gastric juice. Among patients with duodenal ulcer, 2 groups were distinguished: group I included patients in whom peptic ulcer occurred before 30 years; the majority of the patients manifested blood hypergastrinemia, a decrease of bombesin concentration and normal somatostatin concentration; gastric juice was characterized by a lowering of somatostatin concentration and unchanged gastrin concentration; group II was made up of patients who developed peptic ulcer after 30: in the majority of the patients, gastrin concentration was reduced under basal conditions, after loading it was unchanged; in part of the patients, blood somatostatin concentration was elevated, in 16 in exacerbation and in 19 in remission; in the remainder, it was unchanged. The concentration of bombesin in blood remained unchanged. In gastric juice, gastrin concentration was increased only after histamine administration, somatostatin concentration was unchanged whatever the disease stage. In patients with gastric ulcer, gastrin concentration in blood was elevated only under basal conditions, being unchanged in gastric juice irrespective of the disease stage. Meanwhile, the concentration of bombesin was lowered both under basal conditions and after insulin administration, the concentration of somatostatin was decreased both in blood and gastric juice whatever the disease stage.
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PMID:[The content of gastrin, bombesin and somatostatin in the blood and gastric juice of patients with duodenal and gastric peptic ulcer]. 135 94

Chronic gastritis is a common inflammatory disease. In a number of patients, the inflamed gastric mucosa shows a gradual tendency to become atrophic (atrophic gastritis). Gastritis tends to be lifelong, and spontaneous healing is rare. With very few exceptions (e.g. in patients with autoimmune chronic corpus gastritis), gastritis is associated with the presence of the bacterium Helicobacter pylori. Inflammation and atrophy of the gastric mucosa result in impairment of gastric secretory functions (e.g. secretion of gastric acid, pepsin and gastrin). Such impairment is dependent on the topographic type of gastritis; i.e. whether the inflammation and atrophy occur in the antrum (chronic antral gastritis), corpus (chronic corpus gastritis) or in both the antrum and corpus simultaneously (chronic pangastritis). Gastritis of different topographic types associates with different gastric diseases. In patients with H. pylori-related antral or pangastritis, peptic ulcer disease, and in particular duodenal ulcer, is common (with an incidence exceeding 20% after 10 years' follow-up), as compared with peptic ulcer disease, which is very rare in patients with a normal stomach. Gastric ulcer may sometimes occur in patients with a rather atrophic stomach, but both gastric and duodenal ulcers are extremely rare in patients in whom the gastritis accompanies severe atrophic changes in the corpus mucosa. Routine biopsies from the antrum and corpus, and interpretation of the results in the light of the data on gastritis and its atrophic sequelae, allow the gastroenterologist to predict the risk and likelihood of peptic ulcer disease in patients with gastritis.
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PMID:Natural history of gastritis and its relationship to peptic ulcer disease. 139 47

The development of gastric enterochromaffin-like (ECL)-cell hyperplasia in humans may be associated with extreme hypergastrinaemia, as occurs in Zollinger-Ellison syndrome (ZES) and pernicious anaemia (type A gastritis). More recently, endocrine cell hyperplasia has been found in all forms of chronic atrophic gastritis and even in cases of focal atrophy. Serum gastrin levels, non-antral gastric endocrine (argyrophil) cell growth, and the severity and type of concomitant gastritis were monitored in 66 unoperated and 8 antrectomized patients with poorly responsive peptic ulcer or reflux oesophagitis during up to 5 years' treatment with high-dose omeprazole, 40 mg daily. A small subgroup of patients (23%) had serum gastrin concentrations of more than four times the normal upper limit. These patients also had hyperplasia of the gastric argyrophil cells. More importantly, the same subgroup of patients had high-grade (atrophic) gastritis. Micronodular hyperplasia of argyrophil cells was significantly more frequent in biopsies showing atrophic gastritis (48%) than in biopsies showing only superficial gastritis (3.6%). It is concluded that, as previously demonstrated in untreated patients with gastric ulcer, the argyrophil cell hyperplasia observed during high-dose omeprazole therapy is related to the progression of chronic atrophic gastritis rather than to serum gastrin levels.
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PMID:Inter-relationship between serum gastrin levels, gastric mucosal histology and gastric endocrine cell growth. 139 48

Being pepsinogen A (PGA) levels generally reduced and pepsinogen C (PGC) increased in gastric cancer patients, PGA/PGC ratio has been proposed as a useful marker of the tumour. We tested PGA, PGC and Gastrin (G) levels in patients with gastric cancer (39) and, as a control, in patients with epithelial dysplasia (21), chronic atrophic gastritis (57), gastric ulcer (11) or subjects lacking major or minor endoscopic and microscopic changes at gastroscopy (48). PGA and PGA/PGC levels were significantly reduced in gastric cancer patients (p less than 0.005 and p less than 0.0001 respectively with analysis of variance). Gastrin levels were also reduced in the same patients (p less than 0.005). We therefore adopted an index number (PGA x Gastrin) which was also dramatically reduced in gastric cancer (p less than 0.005); using an arbitrarily chosen cut-off, the "marker" showed very high sensitivity (76%), specificity (96%) and overall accuracy (74%, by Youden J test). We therefore suggest the use of the index number PGA x G in the diagnosis of gastric cancer, as the most useful gastrin presently available, to our knowledge.
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PMID:Pepsinogen A/pepsinogen C or pepsinogen A multiplied by gastrin in the diagnosis of gastric cancer? 175 13

The effects of antrectomy and proximal gastric vagotomy on the metabolism of histamine in the human gastric mucosa were studied in the basal state and during pentagastrin stimulation in patients with duodenal or gastric ulcer disease. Mucosal biopsy specimens were taken from the antral and oxyntic gland areas, whereafter histamine content, histidine decarboxylase activity, and histamine methyltransferase activity were simultaneously assayed. Vagotomy was followed by a decrease in the acid secretory capacity and an increase in basal serum gastrin levels. Histamine content of the oxyntic mucosa increased after vagotomy, but the ability of pentagastrin to form new amounts of the amine was impaired. Antrectomy caused a decrease in acid secretion and a fall in gastrin concentrations. Basal histamine content and rate of amine formation in the remaining oxyntic mucosa were unaffected by antrectomy. Antrectomy impaired the ability of pentagastrin to release histamine. Histamine methyltransferase was not affected by pentagastrin, vagotomy, or antrectomy. In conclusion, both antral gastrin and the vagus nerve seem to exert a regulatory influence on the metabolism of histamine in the human oxyntic mucosa. The withdrawal of these factors either causes impaired ability of pentagastrin to release histamine from its storage site or counteracts the ability of pentagastrin to accelerate histamine synthesis.
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PMID:The role of the antrum and the vagus nerve in the metabolism of histamine in the human gastric mucosa. 177 87

Radioimmunoassay was used to determine trypsin, pepsinogen and gastrin content in the blood serum with the use of kits produced by the firm "Oris" (France). A total of 43 patients with peptic ulcer (25 with duodenal ulcer and 18 with gastric ulcer), 20 patients with chronic gastritis and 10 normal subjects were investigated. The study was conducted on an empty stomach and after a test breakfast consisting of 2 boiled eggs, 100 g of cheese, 100 g of white bread, 25 g of butter, 50 g of sugar and 200 g of tea (57 g of proteins, 63 g of fats, 103 g of carbohydrates; calorie value comprised 1212 kcal). It has been shown that food intake is a regulator of gastrin, pepsinogen and trypsin production that permits evaluating functional possibilities of gastrin-producing cells, the main gastric cells and acinar cells of the pancreas. The investigation conducted has evidenced that compensatory shifts in the levels of gastrin, pepsinogen and trypsin taking place in gastroduodenal disease are directed to the improvement of digestive processes.
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PMID:[The effect of food intake on the content of proteolytic enzymes and gastrin in the blood of patients with peptic ulcer and chronic atrophic gastritis]. 179 41

The long-term follow-up study of pylorus-preserving gastrectomy (PPG) for benign gastric ulcer was described in terms of postoperative subjective symptoms related to gastrectomy and recurrent ulceration. Of 134 patients who underwent PPG, 5 patients died within one month after operation, 33 patients died in the follow-up period and 22 patients have not been traced. Seventy-four patients were available for a 3-24 year follow-up (mean 16.6 years) Recurrent ulcer developed in 4 patients, 1, 2, 9 and 11 years after surgery at the greater curvature of pre-pyloric region in all cases. Two patients underwent reoperation. These patients revealed higher gastric acid secretion as compared with that of one month after primary operation. But gastrin hypersecretion and G-cell hyperplasia were not recognized in these patients. According to detailed questionnaires, no patient showed the symptoms of dumping syndrome. The results indicate that PPG is preferable for the surgical treatment of gastric ulcer.
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PMID:[Long-term follow-up study after pylorus-preserving gastrectomy for gastric ulcer]. 187 May 68


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